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Introduction to systematic reviewing 3 May 2005

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Evidence for Policy and Practice Information and Co ... Jo Garcia (User involvement, Education) Jon Ashton. Mukdarut Bangpan. Jackie Barry. Ginny Brunton ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to systematic reviewing 3 May 2005


1
  • Evidence-informed education and the work of the
    EPPI-centre
  • Josephine Kavanagh
  • EPPI-Centre, Social Science Research Unit,
    Institute of Education, London, UK

2
Introduction
  • The EPPI-Centre and SSRU
  • Why evidence informed practice
  • What is a systematic review
  • Example EPPI-Review
  • Librarians and systematic reviews

3
Social Science Research Unit
  • Five streams of work
  • Evidence for Policy and Practice Information and
    Co-ordinating Centre (EPPI-Centre)
  • Childhood Studies
  • Evaluation of Social Interventions
  • Sexual Health, Reproduction and Social Exclusion
  • Perspectives, Participation and Research
  • www.ioe.ac.uk/ssru

4
EPPI-Centre personnel
David Gough (Director), Ann Oakley (Founding
Director) Angela Harden and Sandy Oliver
(Co-directors HP PH) Jo Garcia (User
involvement, Education)
Eva Moran Mark Newman Chloe Powell Rebecca
Rees Abigail Rowe Katy Sutcliffe James
Thomas Carole Torgerson Alex Trouton Helen
Tucker Lisa Underwood
Jon Ashton Mukdarut Bangpan Jackie Barry Ginny
Brunton Jeff Brunton Helen Burchett Esther
Coren Kelly Dickson Adam Fletcher Zoe
Garrett Nicholas Houghton Josephine Kavanagh
5
EPPI-CENTRE VISION AND MISSION STATEMENT
  • Developing and promoting participatory and
    user-friendly systematic reviews addressing
    important questions in different domains of
    policy, practice and research in the public
    interest

6
What is a systematic review?
  • A systematic review is a piece of research in
    its own right. Beginning with a clearly
    formulated question, it uses systematic and
    explicit methods to identify, select and
    critically appraise relevant research.
  • Data from the included studies are extracted,
    analysed and summarised in an appropriate manner
    which may or may not include statistical methods.

7
EPPI-Centre external Review Groups (RGs) and teams
  • 16 funded by the Department for Education and
    Skills (DfES) on different aspects of teaching
    and learning (some with joint funding e.g.
    Nuffield Foundation, NUT (HEFCE), ESRC TLRP)
  • 8 funded by the Teacher Training Agency on
    different aspects of teacher education
  • 1 on transitions of students with disabilities
    from school to work funded by (based in Colorado
    in the US)
  • 1 in higher education funded by the Learning
    Skills Development Agency
  • New collaborations with SCIE and DWP

8
EPPI-Centre in house reviews
  • The effect of travel modes on children's mental
    health, cognitive, social development (DETR)
  • The effects of personal development profiling for
    improving student learning (LTSN)
  • Support for pupils with emotional and behavioural
    difficulties (NFER)
  • Effect of school size on student attainment
    (DfES)
  • Series of reviews on health promotion and public
    health (HP PH) topics funded primarily by the
    Department of Health England

9
Health promotion public health review series
19971999 Workplace health promotion Peer-delivere
d health promotion for young people
  • 19931996
  • Young people and smoking
  • Older people and accidents
  • Young people and sexual health
  • Men who have sex with men (MSM) and sexual health

19992001 Young people and mental
health physical activity healthy eating
20012004 Children and physical
activity healthy eating HIV-health promotion for
MSM
20042007 Incentives for young people Active
transport Teenage pregnancy and parenting Risk
behaviour and accidental injury
10
EPPI-Centre Databases
  • Web site for all EPPI-Centre reviews
    http//eppi.ioe.ac.uk/
  • Research Evidence in Education Library (REEL)
  • Web-page accessibility
  • Review Group details
  • Protocols
  • Reviews and user perspectives
  • Primary data underlying reviews
  • Bibliographic information
  • Detailed descriptions and quality assessment

11
Research for Policy and Practice
  • It should be self-evident that decisions on
    Government policy ought to be informed by sound
    evidence. Social science ought to be
    contributing a major part of that evidence
    baseToo often in the past policy has not been
    informed by good research a former Permanent
    Secretary once ruefully described the old DES as
    a knowledge-free-zone.
  • David Blunkett, February 2000

12
Research evidence for policy and practice
  • policy makers and practitioners who intervene
    in the lives of other people not infrequently do
    more harm than good
  • Chalmers I (2003) Trying to do more good than
    harm in policy and practice the role of
    rigorous, transparent, up to date, replicable
    evaluation. Paper commissioned for the Annals of
    the American Academy of Political and Social
    Science.

13
More harm than good?
14
More harm than good?
15
Reduce the Risk Campaign in the early 1990s in
the UK
  • The risk of cot death is reduced if babies are
    NOT put on the tummy to sleep. Place your baby on
    the back to sleep. ..Healthy babies placed on
    their backs are not more likely to choke.

16
Reduce the Risk Campaign in the early 1990s in
the UK
17
Need for reviews
  • UK government proposed to introduce driver
    education programmes in schools and colleges.
    Recent systematic review suggests it may lead to
  • Early licensing
  • a modest but potentially important increase in
    the proportion of teenagers involved in traffic
    crashes
  • Roberts, Kwan and the Cochrane Injuries Group
    Driver Education Reviewers. School based driver
    education for the prevention of traffic crashes
    (Cochrane Review). In The Cochrane Library,
    Issue 4, 2002. Oxford Update Software.

18
Educational research for practice
. . . (which is) presented in a form or medium
which is largely inaccessible to a non-academic
audience and lack(s) interpretation for a policy
making or practitioner audience. Hillage J,
Pearson R, Anderson A, Tamkin P (1998) Excellence
in Research in Schools. London Department for
Education and Employment/ Institute of
Employment Studies
19
Facilitating the use of research for policy and
practice
  • By preparing systematic reviews of the results
    of relevant, reliable researchAdditional
    research, IF systematic reviews of existing
    research show that this is needed

20
Need for systematic reviews
  • Before any new policy, practice, research
    sensible to ask what is already known within
    particular conceptual frameworks and contexts.
  • To clarify best practice in areas where there is
    uncertainty
  • Contextualizes information from new studies
  • Involves explicit systematic methods and thus
    transparency
  • These may be lacking in non systematic reviews
    and expert opinion however excellent

21
Key features of a systematic review
  • Synthesises the results of primary research
  • Uses explicit and transparent method
  • A piece of research, following standard set of
    stages
  • Accountable, replicable, updateable
  • Need for user involvement

22
Not just any reviews
  • 6 reviews of older people and accident
    prevention
  • Total studies included 137
  • Common to at least two reviews 33
  • Common to all six reviews 2
  • Treated consistently in all reviews 1
  • Oliver S (1999) Users of health services
    following their agenda. In Hood S, Mayall B,
    Oliver S (eds.) Critical Issues in Social
    Research Power and Prejudice. Buckingham Open
    University Press.

23
Stages of an EPPI-Centre review
MAP
Applying inclusion and exclusion criteria to
studies
IN-DEPTH REVIEW
24
School size review
25
Diagrammatic summary of relationship between
school size and outcomes
26
Possible evidence based statement
  • Bigger schools have better exam results and cost
    less
  • but are students and staff less happy?

27
Further details in
  • Garrett Z, Newman M, Elbourne D, Bradley S, Noden
    P, Taylor J, West A (2004) Secondary School Size
    A Systematic Review. In Research Evidence in
    Education Library. London EPPI-Centre, Social
    Science Research Unit, Institute of Education,
    University of London.
  • http//eppi.ioe.ac.uk/EPPIWebContent/reel/review_g
    roups/School_size/s_s_rv1.pdf
  • Newman M, Garrett Z, Elbourne D, Bradley S Noden
    P, Taylor J, West A. Does secondary school size
    make a difference? A systematic review
    (submitted)

28
Roles for the librarian in a systematic review
Applying inclusion and exclusion criteria to
studies
29
Systematic review sources
  • Research Evidence in Education Library (REEL)
    http//eppi.ioe.ac.uk/EPPIWeb/home.aspx?page/reel
    /intro.htm
  • Current Educational Research in the UK (CERUK)
    http//195.194.2.38/starweb/ceruk/servlet.starweb?
    pathceruk/CERUK.web
  • CAMPBELL COLLABORATION - C2 RIPE
    http//www.campbellcollaboration.org/Fralibrary2.h
    tml
  • ERIC search for systematic reviews or
    meta-analyses
  • Other social science / educational databases

30
Developments
  • Online journals and public access - resource
    implications
  • Research visualisation software e.g RefViz
  • Availability and development of online
    systematic review software such as
    EPPI-Reviewer
  • Search methods developing, particularly in
    locating qualitative research
  • E.g. Comprehensive searching vs purposive sampling

31
THANK YOU j.kavanagh_at_ioe.ac.uk
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