Title: MHE3 Reviewing the Medical Literature
1MHE3 Reviewing the Medical Literature
- Research Methods Lecture 2
- A McCaw-Binns
- Section of Community Health
- UWI-Mona
2Learning Objectives
- Discuss reasons for reviewing the literature
- Discuss practical aspects of the process
- Databases on CD-ROM
- Source material in printed form
- How to access and search for material
3Why Review the Published Literature?
- Prevents duplicating work already done
- Determine what others have learned or reported on
the problem - Familiarize oneself with methods that might be
used - Justifies why the research needs to be done
4What is needed
- Review of past research with a bias towards those
aspects of the problem of direct relevance to
your study - In this way the hypothesis to be tested can be
derived in a logical manner - General statements about the field of research
- Narrow and specific set of statements which lead
to the development of the aims or hypotheses - Information gaps/areas for further research
5Reading the Literature
- Process
- Consult search engines
- Review abstracts
- Select papers of interest and read in more detail
- Critically review important papers
- Summarize in coherent and logical way
6Sources of information
- Original articles in journals
- Summaries from the medical literature
- Review articles
- Practice guidelines
- Expert opinion
- Consensus statements
- Editorials
- Summary articles in journals
7Sources of information, contd.
- The internet
- Textbooks
- Consultation with colleagues who are expert
- Attend meetings, lectures, seminars
- Advertisements in journals
- Conversations with representatives from
pharmaceutical/medical technology companies
8Index Medicus/Medline
- Largest database over 12 million records
- References and abstracts from 4000 health
related journals 1966 -- present - Medicine, nursing and veterinary literature
- Allows sophisticated searching by
cross-referencing different headings
9Med-Caribbean
- UWI Medical Library sub data base on Caribbean
research. Includes - Listings not in peer reviewed journals (grey
literature) - Articles by Caribbean scholars published in
journals to which the Medical Library does not
subscribe - Regional information
- You are invited to contribute
10Systematic reviews of evidence
- Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
- Oxford Research group Cochrane Collaboration
- Only reviews high quality RCTs
- Highest grade evidence availability
- On CD-ROM combined with DARE
- Good bibliography of evidence-based methods
11DARE Database of Abstracts of Review of
Effectiveness
- NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination
- Reviews identified from the published literature
- Some meet Cochrane criteria for classification as
systematic - Others not screened and need critical appraisal
by the user - Small number of records but growing
12ASSIA Applied Social Science Index and Abstracts
- Includes social sciences not restricted to
health - Covers sociological aspects of health care
- Health promotion
- Socioeconomic status
- Community care
- Patients rights
13Other databases
- CINAHL Cumulated Index to Nursing and Allied
Health Literature - CANCERLIT cancer journals, books, reports
- AIDSLINE HIV/AIDS information
- PSYCHLIT psychiatry/psychology literature
- AMED complementary medicine
14Internet
- Access to reports, guidelines, discussion lists,
home pages etc. - Quality of material very variable (good ? odd)
- Some reviewed by experts, many not
- Access to information haphazard
- Difficult to assess information on the internet
- ?bona fide expert
- ?views/opinions of an individual
15Using Medline Become familiar with subject
headings
- Biased towards USA words/phrases
- e.g. Prenatal care vs ANC family physician vs GP
- All possible spellings of a word need to be used
- e.g. anemia and anaemia
- Use multiple terms for same condition
- e.g. bed sore/pressure sore/decubitus ulcer
- Sometimes asking for the opposite helps
- e.g patient non-compliance vs patient compliance
16Tree structure
- Medline gives most precise term it can to a
subject - Terms arranged in a tree structure
- Most specific rule crucial to the correct use
of the tree - e.g. Cannot retrieve article on the brain by
searching for central nervous system - If search for NSAIDS, will not retrieve all
articles on aspirin, only general articles on
NSAIDS. Need to search for aspirin
17Medline options
- EXPLODE
- All sub-groups within a subject area will be
included. If you EXPLODE NSAIDS, you broaden
search to include ignored sub-groups. - NSAIDS 4554 hits
- Aspirin 3223 hits
- NSAIDS exploded 13877 hits
- OR
- Broadens search to include more than one topic
that could cover the subject - e.g. Family practice OR primary health care
18Medline options
- AND
- If search produces too many results, the AND
option will narrow search, retrieving fewer
results and being more specific - e.g. aspirin AND myocardial infarction
- LIMIT
- Narrows results further
- e.g. English language only, specific age groups,
human only - Major headings only gives fewer results but
increases relevance of articles to area of
interest
19Too many results?
- Reduce by limiting search to
- English only
- By year(s)
- Reviews only
- Level of emphasis (e.g. major headings only)
- Use more precise terms
- Link to other topics using AND facility
20Too few results?
- Widen search by using alternative sources
- Search more years
- Broaden search using OR option
- Broaden search using EXPLODE option
21How to retrieve results?
- Headings only
- Abstracts only
- Abstracts with author affiliation
- Printed
- Kept on a file
22Request List of Abstracts
- Abstracts
- Summaries of papers which outline
- Author
- Title
- Journal published
- Background and methods
- Key findings
- Review abstracts and select papers to read in full
23Review articles
- Summaries of current medical evidence on a topic
- Systematic reviews provide reliable answers to
important questions - Less subjective/objective conclusion
- Clear guidelines needed in the future to improve
their quality
24Standard process for listing articles
- Journal articles listed by author, title,
journal, year, volume , page number, e.g. -
- Graham W, Wagaarachchi P, Penney G, McCaw-Binns
A, Antwi K Y, Hall M and the CBCA Study Group.
Criteria for clinical audit of the quality of
hospital-based obstetric care in developing
countries. Bulletin WHO 2000 78 (5) 614-620. - McCaw-Binns A, Moody CO. The development of
primary health care in Jamaica. West Indian Med
J 2001 50 Suppl 4 6-10.
25Information of Interest
- Previous research with direct relevance to
research topic - Distribution of the problem
- Who is affected, when and where
- Size and intensity of the problem
- How widespread, severe
- Consequences
- disability, death, waste of resources
26Information of Interest
- Factors which contribute to or are associated
with the problem - If planning an intervention, describe possible
solutions that - may have been tried
- what worked, what did not and how or why
- General agreements/disagreements among previous
researchers
27Summarize important articles
- NOTE
- Author(s), title, source (journal, book etc)
- Summary of contents relevant to your study
- Methodology (comment if necessary)
- Key findings
- Key weaknesses, data gaps
- Areas for further research
- How you may use study information in your
research - Scan references for leads to other information
sources
28Critical review of the literature
- STUDY DESIGN
- Hypothesis
- Study population
- Inclusion/exclusion criteria
- Sample selection
- Sample size
- How many individuals are in the study and control
groups - Are there sufficient persons to answer the
research question
29Writing a Literature Review
- Write a 1-2 page coherent discussion, using the
relevant references for each category of
information - Article may be cited gt once if it addresses more
than one of your areas of interest /need - e.g. Disease prevalence, risk factors,
methodology - Avoid redundancy
- gt1 article may be cited to support a point
without repetition
30 Bias
- Distortion of information so that it reflects
opinions or conclusions that do not represent the
real situation - If you have reservations about selected
references, of if you find conflicting opinions
in the literature, discuss these openly and
critically
31Biases to be aware of
- Playing down controversies and differences in
ones own study results - Restricting references to those that support the
view of the author - Drawing far reaching conclusion from preliminary
data - Making sweeping generalizations from one case or
a small study - LEAPS OF FAITH!
32Ethical considerations
- Careless presentation and interpretation of data
may mislead readers, even lead to wrong decisions
affecting peoples health - If researchers present findings without citing
the source, can be charged with plagiarism - Appropriate referencing should occur when you
prepare proposals and write research reports
33Ethical issues Avoid plagiarism
- Theft of anothers work or ideas
- You cannot use another writers exact words
without quotation marks and a complete citation - You cannot edit/paraphrase another persons work
and present the revised version as yours - You cannot present another persons ideas as your
own, even if you use totally different words to
press those ideas
34Summary
- Review the literature for information, ideas,
identification of information gaps, areas for
further research - Summarize past work with a critical eye to study
design, implementation, analysis, interpretation - Document previous work adequately and avoid
plagiarism and bias