The importance of adequate intervention descriptions in minimising research waste and improving research usability and reproducibility has gained attention in the past few years. Nearly all focus to date has been on intervention reporting in randomised trials. Yet clinicians are encouraged to use systematic reviews, whenever available, rather than single trials to inform their practice. This article explores the problem and implications of incomplete intervention details during the planning, conduct, and reporting of systematic reviews and makes recommendations for review authors, peer reviewers, and journal editors
Michelle Gates, Allison Gates, Dawid Pieper, Ricardo J. Fernandes, Andrea C. Tricco, David Moher, Sue Brennan, Tianjing Li, Michelle Pollock, Carole Lunny, Dino Sepúlveda, Joanne E. McKenzie, Karen A. Robinson, Katja Matthias, Konstantinos I. Bougioukas, Paolo Fusar‐Poli, Penny Whiting, Stephana J. Moss, Lisa Hartling
Tammy Hoffmann, Paul Glasziou, Isabelle Boutron, Ruairidh Milne, Rafael Perera, David Moher, Douglas G. Altman, Virginia Barbour, H. Macdonald, Michelle Johnston, Sarah E Lamb, Mary Dixon‐Woods, Peter McCulloch, Jeremy C Wyatt, A.-W. Chan, Susan Michie
Tammy Hoffmann, Paul Glasziou, Isabelle Boutron, Ruairidh Milne, Rafael Perera, David Moher, Douglas G. Altman, Virginia Barbour, Helen Macdonald, Marie Johnston, Sarah E Lamb, Mary Dixon‐Woods, Peter McCulloch, Jeremy C Wyatt, An‐Wen Chan, Susan Michie
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.