Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway.
Health Systems Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2019 Aug 8;17(1):75. doi: 10.1186/s12961-019-0468-4.
WHO has recognised the need to improve its guideline methodology to ensure that guideline decision-making processes are transparent and evidence based, and that the resulting recommendations are relevant and applicable. To help achieve this, WHO guidelines now typically enhance intervention effectiveness data with evidence on a wider range of decision-making criteria, including how stakeholders value different outcomes, equity, gender and human rights impacts, and the acceptability and feasibility of interventions. Qualitative evidence syntheses (QES) are increasingly used to provide evidence on this wider range of issues. In this paper, we describe and discuss how to use the findings from QES to populate decision-making criteria in evidence-to-decision (EtD) frameworks. This is the second in a series of three papers that examines the use of QES in developing clinical and health system guidelines.
WHO convened a writing group drawn from the technical teams involved in its recent (2010-2018) guidelines employing QES. Using a pragmatic and iterative approach that included feedback from WHO staff and other stakeholders, the group reflected on, discussed and identified key methods and research implications from designing QES and using the resulting findings in guideline development.
We describe a step-wise approach to populating EtD frameworks with QES findings. This involves allocating findings to the different EtD criteria (how stakeholders value different outcomes, equity, acceptability and feasibility, etc.), weaving the findings into a short narrative relevant to each criterion, and inserting this summary narrative into the corresponding 'research evidence' sections of the EtD. We also identify areas for further methodological research, including how best to summarise and present qualitative data to groups developing guidelines, how these groups draw on different types of evidence in their decisions, and the extent to which our experiences are relevant to decision-making processes in fields other than health.
This paper shows the value of incorporating QES within a guideline development process, and the roles that qualitative evidence can play in integrating the views and experiences of relevant stakeholders, including groups who may not be otherwise represented in the decision-making process.
世界卫生组织认识到需要改进其指南方法,以确保指南决策过程透明且基于证据,并使由此产生的建议具有相关性和适用性。为了实现这一目标,世界卫生组织的指南现在通常会增强干预措施有效性数据,纳入更广泛的决策标准的证据,包括利益相关者如何重视不同的结果、公平性、性别和人权影响,以及干预措施的可接受性和可行性。定性证据综合(QES)越来越多地用于提供更广泛问题的证据。在本文中,我们描述并讨论了如何使用 QES 的研究结果来填充证据决策(EtD)框架中的决策标准。这是三篇研究使用 QES 制定临床和卫生系统指南的系列论文中的第二篇。
世界卫生组织召集了一个由参与其最近(2010-2018 年)使用 QES 的指南制定的技术团队组成的写作小组。该小组采用实用且迭代的方法,包括来自世界卫生组织工作人员和其他利益相关者的反馈,对设计 QES 和将研究结果用于指南制定的关键方法和研究影响进行了反思、讨论和确定。
我们描述了一种逐步将 QES 研究结果纳入 EtD 框架的方法。这涉及将研究结果分配给不同的 EtD 标准(利益相关者如何重视不同的结果、公平性、可接受性和可行性等),将研究结果编织成与每个标准相关的简短叙述,并将该总结叙述插入到 EtD 的相应“研究证据”部分。我们还确定了进一步进行方法学研究的领域,包括如何最好地总结和呈现定性数据给制定指南的小组,这些小组如何在其决策中利用不同类型的证据,以及我们的经验在卫生以外的领域的决策过程中具有多大的相关性。
本文展示了将 QES 纳入指南制定过程的价值,以及定性证据在整合相关利益相关者的观点和经验方面可以发挥的作用,包括可能不在决策过程中代表的群体。