Liverpool Reviews and Implementation Group (LRIG), Department of Health Services Research, University of Liverpool, Second Floor, Whelan Building, The Quadrangle, Brownlow Hill, Liverpool, L69 3GB, UK.
Faculty of Health and Wellbeing, University of Central Lancashire, Brook Building, Preston, PR1 2HE, UK.
Syst Rev. 2017 Dec 29;6(1):266. doi: 10.1186/s13643-017-0638-9.
Systematic review guidance recommends the use of programme theory to inform considerations of if and how healthcare interventions may work differently across socio-economic status (SES) groups. This study aimed to address the lack of detail on how reviewers operationalise this in practice.
A methodological systematic review was undertaken to assess if, how and the extent to which systematic reviewers operationalise the guidance on the use of programme theory in considerations of socio-economic inequalities in health. Multiple databases were searched from January 2013 to May 2016. Studies were included if they were systematic reviews assessing the effectiveness of an intervention and included data on SES. Two reviewers independently screened all studies, undertook quality assessment and extracted data. A narrative approach to synthesis was adopted.
A total of 37 systematic reviews were included, 10 of which were explicit in the use of terminology for 'programme theory'. Twenty-nine studies used programme theory to inform both their a priori assumptions and explain their review findings. Of these, 22 incorporated considerations of both what and how interventions do/do not work in SES groups to both predict and explain their review findings. Thirteen studies acknowledged 24 unique theoretical references to support their assumptions of what or how interventions may have different effects in SES groups. Most reviewers used supplementary evidence to support their considerations of differential effectiveness. The majority of authors outlined a programme theory in the "Introduction" and "Discussion" sections of the review to inform their assumptions or provide explanations of what or how interventions may result in differential effects within or across SES groups. About a third of reviews used programme theory to inform the review analysis and/or synthesis. Few authors used programme theory to inform their inclusion criteria, data extraction or quality assessment. Twenty-one studies tested their a priori programme theory.
The use of programme theory to inform considerations of if, what and how interventions lead to differential effects on health in different SES groups in the systematic review process is not yet widely adopted, is used implicitly, is often fragmented and is not implemented in a systematic way.
系统评价指南建议使用规划理论来告知医疗干预措施在社会经济地位(SES)群体中是否以及如何可能产生不同的效果。本研究旨在解决审查员在实践中如何具体实施这一指导的细节不足的问题。
进行了一项方法学系统评价,以评估系统审查员在考虑健康方面的社会经济不平等问题时,是否、如何以及在何种程度上实施了关于使用规划理论的指南。从 2013 年 1 月至 2016 年 5 月,在多个数据库中进行了搜索。如果系统评价评估干预措施的有效性并包含 SES 数据,则纳入研究。两名审查员独立筛选所有研究,进行质量评估并提取数据。采用叙述性综合方法。
共纳入 37 项系统评价,其中 10 项明确使用了“规划理论”术语。29 项研究使用规划理论来告知其先验假设并解释其审查结果。其中,22 项研究纳入了干预措施在 SES 群体中是否以及如何发挥作用的考虑,以预测和解释其审查结果。13 项研究承认有 24 个独特的理论参考,以支持他们关于干预措施在 SES 群体中可能产生不同效果的假设。大多数审查员使用补充证据来支持他们对差异性效果的考虑。大多数作者在审查的“引言”和“讨论”部分概述了一个规划理论,以告知他们的假设或解释干预措施如何在 SES 群体内部或跨 SES 群体中产生不同的效果。约三分之一的审查使用规划理论来告知审查分析和/或综合。很少有作者使用规划理论来告知他们的纳入标准、数据提取或质量评估。21 项研究测试了他们的先验规划理论。
在系统审查过程中,使用规划理论来告知医疗干预措施是否以及如何导致不同 SES 群体的健康产生差异效果的考虑尚未得到广泛采用,使用方式是隐含的,往往是零散的,并且没有系统地实施。