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   English Wikipedia
 
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 Methodology in conducting a systematic review of systematic reviews of healthcare  interventions Smith V; Devane D; Begley CM; Clarke MBMC Med Res Methodol  2011[Feb]; 11 (1): 15BACKGROUND: Hundreds of studies of maternity care interventions have been  published, too many for most people involved in providing maternity care to  identify and consider when making decisions. It became apparent that systematic  reviews of individual studies were required to appraise, summarise and bring  together existing studies in a single place. However, decision makers are  increasingly faced by a plethora of such reviews and these are likely to be of  variable quality and scope, with more than one review of important topics.  Systematic reviews (or overviews) of reviews are a logical and appropriate next  step, allowing the findings of separate reviews to be compared and contrasted,  providing clinical decision makers with the evidence they need. METHODS: The  methods used to identify and appraise published and unpublished reviews  systematically, drawing on our experiences and good practice in the conduct and  reporting of systematic reviews are described. The process of identifying and  appraising all published reviews allows researchers to describe the quality of  this evidence base, summarise and compare the review's conclusions and discuss  the strength of these conclusions. RESULTS: Methodological challenges and  possible solutions are described within the context of (i) sources, (ii) study  selection, (iii) quality assessment (i.e. the extent of searching undertaken for  the reviews, description of study selection and inclusion criteria, comparability  of included studies, assessment of publication bias and assessment of  heterogeneity), (iv) presentation of results, and (v) implications for practice  and research. CONCLUSION: Conducting a systematic review of reviews highlights  the usefulness of bringing together a summary of reviews in one place, where  there is more than one review on an important topic. The methods described here  should help clinicians to review and appraise published reviews systematically,  and aid evidence-based clinical decision-making.|*Meta-Analysis as Topic[MESH]|*Systematic Reviews as Topic[MESH]|Female[MESH]|Health Services Research/standards[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Information Storage and Retrieval[MESH]|Maternal Health Services[MESH]
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