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Healthcare Org 1, 2.08 (V) Video - Topic 3. What Are Systematic Reviews? (Optional)

2.08 (V) Video - Topic 3. What Are Systematic Reviews? (Optional)

what are systematic reviews systematic reviews help make sense of many kinds of data they're a way of reviewing all the data and results from research about a particular question in a standardized systematic way a systematic review helps give an objective and transparent overview of all evidence surrounding a particular question the Cochrane Collaboration logo visually represents how results from some systematic reviews can be explained here's how a systematic review works first a question must be defined and an objective method for asking the question is agreed imagine a circle as the area defined by a question everything inside it concerns the question everything outside of it does not in this circle relevant data will be included a search for relevant data begins this data can come from many sources including data from clinical trials imagine the shapes represent datasets from different research for example different clinical trials the data set must be the right shape to fit only data from research that matches certain criteria can be included so that the results are reliable for example selecting research that is good quality and answers the defined question if the research meets the criteria more detailed information about the research can be collected or extracted information extracted can include how the research was done often called the method who participated in the research including how many people how it was paid for for example funding sources what happened the outcomes this information is judged against criteria in order to assess the quality of the research once the information is extracted it can be combined using complex statistical methods to give an overall result from all of the data this circle is one way of representing this data visually it's called a blob a gram or a forest plot the area of inquiry defined by the question be divided into a yes and a no half a positive and a negative side the short of the line the more confident we are of what the data is telling us think of a longer line as less focused and scattered data and shorter as more focused and bunched imagine knowledge is light and ignorance as darkness the more spread the focus of the light the weaker it is and the less clear things are if the light is focused and data is grouped more clearly we can be more confident of what we see the diamond represents the combined results of all the data included because this combined result uses data from more sources than just one data set it's considered more reliable and better evidence the more data there is the more confident we can be you


2.08 (V) Video - Topic 3. What Are Systematic Reviews? (Optional)

what are systematic reviews systematic reviews help make sense of many kinds of data they're a way of reviewing all the data and results from research about a particular question in a standardized systematic way a systematic review helps give an objective and transparent overview of all evidence surrounding a particular question the Cochrane Collaboration logo visually represents how results from some systematic reviews can be explained here's how a systematic review works first a question must be defined and an objective method for asking the question is agreed imagine a circle as the area defined by a question everything inside it concerns the question everything outside of it does not in this circle relevant data will be included a search for relevant data begins this data can come from many sources including data from clinical trials imagine the shapes represent datasets from different research for example different clinical trials the data set must be the right shape to fit only data from research that matches certain criteria can be included so that the results are reliable for example selecting research that is good quality and answers the defined question if the research meets the criteria more detailed information about the research can be collected or extracted information extracted can include how the research was done often called the method who participated in the research including how many people how it was paid for for example funding sources what happened the outcomes this information is judged against criteria in order to assess the quality of the research once the information is extracted it can be combined using complex statistical methods to give an overall result from all of the data this circle is one way of representing this data visually it's called a blob a gram or a forest plot the area of inquiry defined by the question be divided into a yes and a no half a positive and a negative side the short of the line the more confident we are of what the data is telling us think of a longer line as less focused and scattered data and shorter as more focused and bunched imagine knowledge is light and ignorance as darkness the more spread the focus of the light the weaker it is and the less clear things are if the light is focused and data is grouped more clearly we can be more confident of what we see the diamond represents the combined results of all the data included because this combined result uses data from more sources than just one data set it's considered more reliable and better evidence the more data there is the more confident we can be you