School of Population Health, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Institute of Population Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2024 Mar 17;24(1):68. doi: 10.1186/s12874-024-02186-6.
The challenging nature of studies with incarcerated populations and other offender groups can impede the conduct of research, particularly that involving complex study designs such as randomised control trials and clinical interventions. Providing an overview of study designs employed in this area can offer insights into this issue and how research quality may impact on health and justice outcomes.
We used a rule-based approach to extract study designs from a sample of 34,481 PubMed abstracts related to epidemiological criminology published between 1963 and 2023. The results were compared against an accepted hierarchy of scientific evidence.
We evaluated our method in a random sample of 100 PubMed abstracts. An F1-Score of 92.2% was returned. Of 34,481 study abstracts, almost 40.0% (13,671) had an extracted study design. The most common study design was observational (37.3%; 5101) while experimental research in the form of trials (randomised, non-randomised) was present in 16.9% (2319). Mapped against the current hierarchy of scientific evidence, 13.7% (1874) of extracted study designs could not be categorised. Among the remaining studies, most were observational (17.2%; 2343) followed by systematic reviews (10.5%; 1432) with randomised controlled trials accounting for 8.7% (1196) of studies and meta-analysis for 1.4% (190) of studies.
It is possible to extract epidemiological study designs from a large-scale PubMed sample computationally. However, the number of trials, systematic reviews, and meta-analysis is relatively small - just 1 in 5 articles. Despite an increase over time in the total number of articles, study design details in the abstracts were missing. Epidemiological criminology still lacks the experimental evidence needed to address the health needs of the marginalized and isolated population that is prisoners and offenders.
对被监禁人群和其他罪犯群体进行研究具有挑战性,这可能会阻碍研究的进行,尤其是涉及复杂研究设计(如随机对照试验和临床干预)的研究。概述该领域采用的研究设计可以深入了解这一问题,以及研究质量如何影响健康和司法结果。
我们使用基于规则的方法从 1963 年至 2023 年发表的与流行病学犯罪学相关的 34481 篇 PubMed 摘要中提取研究设计。结果与公认的科学证据层次结构进行了比较。
我们在 100 篇 PubMed 摘要的随机样本中评估了我们的方法。返回的 F1 分数为 92.2%。在 34481 篇研究摘要中,近 40.0%(13671 篇)提取了研究设计。最常见的研究设计是观察性研究(37.3%;5101 篇),而以试验(随机、非随机)形式进行的实验研究则占 16.9%(2319 篇)。根据当前的科学证据层次结构,13.7%(1874 篇)提取的研究设计无法归类。在其余研究中,大多数是观察性研究(17.2%;2343 篇),其次是系统评价(10.5%;1432 篇),随机对照试验占研究的 8.7%(1196 篇),荟萃分析占研究的 1.4%(190 篇)。
从大规模的 PubMed 样本中通过计算提取流行病学研究设计是可行的。然而,试验、系统评价和荟萃分析的数量相对较少——每 5 篇文章中只有 1 篇。尽管随着时间的推移,文章总数有所增加,但摘要中缺少研究设计细节。流行病学犯罪学仍然缺乏解决被边缘化和孤立的囚犯和罪犯群体的健康需求所需的实验证据。