Centre for Health Economics and Policy Analysis, Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, 1200 Main St. West, HSC-2D3, Hamilton, ON, Canada, L8N 3Z5.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2009 Dec 16;7 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S7. doi: 10.1186/1478-4505-7-S1-S7.
This article is part of a series written for people responsible for making decisions about health policies and programmes and for those who support these decision makers. Systematic reviews are increasingly seen as a key source of information in policymaking, particularly in terms of assisting with descriptions of the impacts of options. Relative to single studies they offer a number of advantages related to understanding impacts and are also seen as a key source of information for clarifying problems and providing complementary perspectives on options. Systematic reviews can be undertaken to place problems in comparative perspective and to describe the likely harms of an option. They also assist with understanding the meanings that individuals or groups attach to a problem, how and why options work, and stakeholder views and experiences related to particular options. A number of constraints have hindered the wider use of systematic reviews in policymaking. These include a lack of awareness of their value and a mismatch between the terms employed by policymakers, when attempting to retrieve systematic reviews, and the terms used by the original authors of those reviews. Mismatches between the types of information that policymakers are seeking, and the way in which authors fail to highlight (or make obvious) such information within systematic reviews have also proved problematic. In this article, we suggest three questions that can be used to guide those searching for systematic reviews, particularly reviews about the impacts of options being considered. These are: 1. Is a systematic review really what is needed? 2. What databases and search strategies can be used to find relevant systematic reviews? 3. What alternatives are available when no relevant review can be found?
这篇文章是为负责制定卫生政策和规划的人员以及为这些决策者提供支持的人员撰写的一系列文章的一部分。系统评价越来越被视为决策制定的主要信息来源,特别是在帮助描述各种选择的影响方面。与单一研究相比,系统评价在理解影响方面具有许多优势,也被视为澄清问题和提供选择的补充观点的主要信息来源。系统评价可以用于比较问题,并描述某一选择的可能危害。它们还有助于了解个人或团体对一个问题的看法、理解选择的作用方式和原因,以及利益相关者对特定选择的看法和经验。一些限制因素阻碍了系统评价在决策制定中的更广泛应用。这些因素包括对其价值的认识不足,以及决策者在试图检索系统评价时使用的术语与这些评价的原始作者使用的术语之间不匹配。决策者正在寻找的信息类型与作者未能在系统评价中突出显示(或明显体现)此类信息的方式之间不匹配,这也被证明是一个问题。在本文中,我们建议提出三个问题来指导那些正在寻找系统评价的人员,特别是正在寻找所考虑的选择的影响的系统评价的人员。这三个问题是:1. 是否真的需要系统评价?2. 可以使用哪些数据库和搜索策略来查找相关的系统评价?3. 在找不到相关评价时,有哪些替代方案?