Albarqouni Loai, Abu-Rmeileh Niveen Me, Elessi Khamis, Obeidallah Mohammad, Bjertness Espen, Chalmers Iain
Centre for Research in Evidence Based Practice, Bond University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia.
Institute of Community and Public Health, Birzeit University, Ramallah, Occupied Palestinian Territory.
BMJ Open. 2017 Jun 9;7(6):e016455. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016455.
Over the past decade, there has been an increase in reports of health research from Palestine, but no assessment of their quality. We have assessed the quality of reports of Palestinian health research and factors associated with it.
This is a systematic review.
We searched Medline and Scopus for reports of original research relevant to human health or healthcare authored by researchers affiliated with Palestinian institutions and published between January 2000 and August 2015 inclusive.
We used international guidelines to assess report quality, classifying as adequate those with ≥50% of items completely addressed.
Of 2383 reports identified, 497 met our inclusion criteria. Just over half (264; 55%) of these were published after 2010. 354 (71%) of first authors were affiliated with Palestinian institutions; 261 (53%) reports had coauthors from outside Palestine. The majority of the reports in our study were inadequately reported (342; 69%), and none had adequately reported all items. Of 439 observational studies, 11 (2.5%) reports provided adequate descriptions of eligibility criteria and selection procedures; 35 (8%) reported efforts to address potential sources of bias; 50 (11.4%) reported the basis for the study sample size; and funding sources were mentioned in 74 reports (17%). Higher reporting quality was associated with international affiliation of the first author (prevalence ratio (PR) 1.6 (95% CI 1.2 to 2.1)), international collaboration (PR 2.9 (95% CI 1.7 to 5.0)), international funding (PR 1.9 (95% CI1.5 to 2.5)), publication after 2005 (PR 3.9 (95% CI 1.8 to 8.5)) and four or more coauthors (PR 1.5 (95% CI 1.1 to 2.1)).
Although the quality of reports of Palestinian research has improved in recent years, it remains well below an acceptable standard. International reporting guidelines should be used to guide research design and improve the quality of reports of research.
The systematic review protocol was registered in the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) registery (registration number: CRD42015027553).
在过去十年中,来自巴勒斯坦的健康研究报告有所增加,但对其质量尚无评估。我们评估了巴勒斯坦健康研究报告的质量及其相关因素。
这是一项系统评价。
我们在Medline和Scopus数据库中检索了由巴勒斯坦机构附属研究人员撰写的、与人类健康或医疗保健相关的原创性研究报告,发表时间为2000年1月至2015年8月(含)。
在检索到的2383篇报告中,497篇符合我们的纳入标准。其中略超过一半(264篇;55%)是在2010年后发表的。第一作者中有354人(71%)隶属于巴勒斯坦机构;261篇报告(53%)有来自巴勒斯坦以外的共同作者。我们研究中的大多数报告报告不充分(342篇;69%),没有一篇报告对所有项目都进行了充分报告。在439项观察性研究中,11篇(2.5%)报告对纳入标准和选择程序进行了充分描述;35篇(8%)报告了为解决潜在偏倚来源所做的努力;50篇(11.4%)报告了研究样本量的依据;74篇报告(17%)提及了资金来源。报告质量较高与第一作者的国际隶属关系(患病率比(PR)1.6(95%可信区间1.2至2.1))、国际合作(PR 2.9(95%可信区间1.7至5.0))、国际资金(PR 1.9(95%可信区间1.5至2.5))、2005年后发表(PR 3.9(95%可信区间1.8至8.5))以及有四名或更多共同作者(PR 1.5(95%可信区间1.1至2.1))相关。
尽管近年来巴勒斯坦研究报告的质量有所提高,但仍远低于可接受的标准。应使用国际报告指南来指导研究设计并提高研究报告的质量。
该系统评价方案已在国际前瞻性系统评价注册库(PROSPERO)注册(注册号:CRD42015027553)。