- published: 02 Jun 2014
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A systematic review is a form of literature review that collects and looks at multiple studies. A review is usually quicker and more cost efficient than embarking on a new study. Researchers use methods that are determined before they begin to frame one or more questions, then they find and analyse, the studies that relate to that question. Systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials are crucial to evidence-based medicine.
An understanding of systematic reviews, and how to implement them in practice, is becoming mandatory for all professionals involved in the delivery of health care. Besides health interventions, systematic reviews may concern clinical tests, public health interventions, social interventions, adverse effects, and economic evaluations. Systematic reviews are not limited to medicine and are quite common in all other sciences where data are collected, published in the literature, and an assessment of methodological quality for a precisely defined subject would be helpful.
Systematic may mean:
Intro to Systematic Reviews & Meta-Analyses
Systematic Reviews Part 1: Literature Database Selection, Search Strategies & Reference Management
Systematic Reviews Part 1: Introduction
Systematic Reviews Part 2: Screening Studies for Systematic Reviews Using Inclusion & Exclusion Crit
Systematic Reviews Part 3: Data Analysis
What are systematic reviews?
Systematic Review and Evidence-Based Medicine
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews
How to Critically Appraise a Systematic Review: Part 1
Here's a brief introduction to how to evaluate systematic reviews.
8/19/15 - Systematic Reviews Part 1: Literature Database Selection, Search Strategies & Reference Management Speaker: Christopher Stave, MLS Instructional and Liaison Program Coordinator Lane Medical Library Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford University
8/26/15 - Systematic Reviews Part 2: Screening Studies for Systematic Reviews Using Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria Sylvia Bereknyei, DrPH, MS SCeMERI Research Scholar, Stanford University
9/2/15 - Systematic Review Part III: How to do data analysis Lane Medical Library Classes - Stanford School of Medicine Rita Popat PhD Clinical Associate Professor Health Research and Policy Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford University Start time:
Summary: This video explains why systematic reviews are important and how they are done. This includes an explanation of how the effects of interventions are compared in order to provide evidence. Attribution/credits: Prepared by the Cochrane Consumers and Communication Group, La Trobe University and generously support by Cochrane Australia. Written by Jack Nunn and Sophie Hill. cccrg.cochrane.org. Animation by Shakira Moss, Doodler Animation - doodler.com.au
You can directly support Healthcare Triage on Patreon: http://vid.io/xqXr If you can afford to pay a little every month, it really helps us to continue producing great content. You've probably heard of "evidence-based medicine". It's the idea that we practice based on research and data. There's another way of practicing called "eminence-based medicine". It's the idea that we listen to the person who's been around the longest or who has somehow managed to be labelled the expert. It used to be that such a person would periodically get to write a review article in some journal, and that would be how everyone learned what to do in medicine. That's a problem. We've got a solution. Systematic reviews! For those of you who want to read more or see references, look here: http://theincidentalecon...
The difference between a systematic review and a standard literature review How to locate different review articles in PubMed Introduce the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
Part 1 of a 2 part series on how to critically appraise systematic reviews
อบรมเชิงปฏิบัติการ เรื่อง การทบทวนวรรณกรรมอย่างมีระบบ(Systematic Review) วิทยากรโดย อาจารย์ ดร.ทรงพันธ์ เจิมประยงค์ วันที่ 19 สิงหาคม 2559 ณ ห้องประชุมใหญ่ ชั้น5 อาคารเทพรัตน์วิทยาโชติ สำนักหอสมุด มหาวิทยาลัยเกษตรศาสตร์ บางเขน
Find out the steps of systematic reviews.
8/26/15 - Systematic Reviews Part 2: Screening Studies for Systematic Reviews Using Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria Sylvia Bereknyei, DrPH, MS SCeMERI Research Scholar, Stanford University
Paul Murphy, Deputy Librarian at RCSI, presents on literature searching in evidence based reviews and in systematic reviews
Aspetar Tuesday Lecture Series : Systematic reviews: Myths and facts Korakakis Vasileios, Senior Physiotherapist/ Researcher-Aspetar Tuesday lecture: March 15, 2016