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What is a systematic review?

A systematic review is a rigorous research method used to synthesise and summarise the best available evidence on a clearly defined topic. Systematic reviews use structured, transparent and replicable methods to identify, appraise and synthesise findings from multiple studies. The goal is to provide a comprehensive and unbiased summary of existing knowledge.


A systematic reviews aim to:

  • Synthesise and summarise existing knowledge
  • Provide a comprehensive, unbiased synthesis of many relevant studies in a single document
  • Use rigorous and transparent methods

Systematic reviews are considered the highest level of evidence for many types of research questions.


What systematic reviews typically involve

Systematic reviews generally include:

  • A clearly formulated, focused research question
  • Systematic and comprehensive searching across multiple databases
  • Predefined eligibility criteria
  • Assessment of the quality or risk of bias of included studies
  • Structured data extraction
  • Synthesis of findings, which may or may not include meta-analysis
  • Transparent reporting following international guidelines such as PRISMA

This structured process reduces bias and increases the credibility of the final conclusions.


Key features of systematic reviews

  • Comprehensive: Aim to include all relevant studies on a topic
  • Transparent: Use documented, reproducible methods
  • Rigorous: Assess the quality or risk of bias of included studies
  • Analytical: May pool results statistically in a meta-analysis when appropriate
  • High-level evidence: Support evidence-based practice and decision making


Benefits of systematic reviews

  • Provide a comprehensive summary of existing research
  • Reduce bias through systematic, transparent searching and quality assessment
  • Increase statistical power when meta-analyses are conducted
  • Offer generalisable findings due to inclusion of diverse populations
  • Identify research gaps
  • Inform evidence-based decision making by producing Level 1 evidence


Limitations of systematic reviews

  • Quality depends on the methodological quality of included studies
  • Publication bias may affect the evidence base
  • Heterogeneity across studies can make pooling difficult
  • Need regular updating due to continuous publication of new research
  • Language and database bias may occur if searches are restricted


Types of systematic reviews

  • Effectiveness reviews
  • Experiential (qualitative) reviews
  • Costs/economic evaluation reviews
  • Prevalence and/or incidence reviews
  • Diagnostic test accuracy reviews
  • Etiology and/or risk reviews
  • Expert opinion/policy reviews
  • Psychometric reviews
  • Prognostic reviews
  • Methodological systematic reviews

Each review type answers a different category of research question.


Systematic reviews vs. meta-analysis

A systematic review is a method of synthesising evidence, while a meta-analysis is a statistical technique used to pool results across quantitative studies. A meta-analysis can be part of a systematic review, but not all systematic reviews include one.


When should you use a systematic review?

Use a systematic review when you want to:

  • Summarise and evaluate the totality of evidence on a specific research question
  • Provide strong evidence to guide policy, practice or clinical decision making
  • Identify what is already known and where research gaps exist
  • Determine the effectiveness, experiences, accuracy or prevalence of a phenomenon
  • Generate high-quality evidence to inform future research

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