Petticrew Mark, Knai Cécile, Thomas James, Rehfuess Eva Annette, Noyes Jane, Gerhardus Ansgar, Grimshaw Jeremy M, Rutter Harry, McGill Elizabeth
Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
EPPI-Centre, SSRU, Department of Social Science, UCL Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK.
BMJ Glob Health. 2019 Jan 25;4(Suppl 1):e000899. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-000899. eCollection 2019.
There is growing interest in the potential for complex systems perspectives in evaluation. This reflects a move away from interest in linear chains of cause-and-effect, towards considering health as an outcome of interlinked elements within a connected whole. Although systems-based approaches have a long history, their concrete implications for health decisions are still being assessed. Similarly, the implications of systems perspectives for the conduct of systematic reviews require further consideration. Such reviews underpin decisions about the implementation of effective interventions, and are a crucial part of the development of guidelines. Although they are tried and tested as a means of synthesising evidence on the effectiveness of interventions, their applicability to the synthesis of evidence about complex interventions and complex systems requires further investigation. This paper, one of a series of papers commissioned by the WHO, sets out the concrete methodological implications of a complexity perspective for the conduct of systematic reviews. It focuses on how review questions can be framed within a complexity perspective, and on the implications for the evidence that is reviewed. It proposes criteria which can be used to determine whether or not a complexity perspective will add value to a review or an evidence-based guideline, and describes how to operationalise key aspects of complexity as concrete research questions. Finally, it shows how these questions map onto specific types of evidence, with a focus on the role of qualitative and quantitative evidence, and other types of information.
人们对复杂系统视角在评估中的潜力越来越感兴趣。这反映了一种从关注线性因果链,转向将健康视为一个相互关联的整体中相互联系的要素的结果的转变。尽管基于系统的方法历史悠久,但其对健康决策的具体影响仍在评估之中。同样,系统视角对系统评价实施的影响也需要进一步考虑。此类评价为有效干预措施的实施决策提供支持,并且是指南制定的关键部分。尽管作为综合干预措施有效性证据的一种手段,它们已经经过了试验和检验,但其在综合关于复杂干预措施和复杂系统的证据方面的适用性仍需进一步研究。本文是世界卫生组织委托撰写的系列论文之一,阐述了复杂性视角对系统评价实施的具体方法学影响。它关注如何在复杂性视角下构建评价问题,以及对所审查证据的影响。它提出了可用于确定复杂性视角是否会为评价或循证指南增加价值的标准,并描述了如何将复杂性的关键方面作为具体研究问题进行操作化。最后,它展示了这些问题如何映射到特定类型的证据上,重点关注定性和定量证据以及其他类型信息的作用。