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Before beginning a Systematic Review ask yourself:

 

  • Do I have a clearly defined clinical question with established inclusion and exclusion criteria?

  • Do I have a team of at least 3 people?

  • Do I have time to go through as many search results as we might find?

  • Do I have resources to get foreign-language articles appropriately translated?

  • Do I have the statistical resources to analyse the pool data?

If you answered 'No' to any of the first 4 questions, a traditional literature review will be more appropriate. If you answered 'No' to the last question, a meta-analysis will not be an appropriate methodology for your review.

 

If a Systematic Review is not appropriate for your project, we can still support you with a systematic search for a literature review or some other form of review*. To request this please follow this link to access our literature search request form

 

Systematic Review vs Literature Review**

Criteria

Systematic Reviews

Literature Reviews

Question

Focused on a single question (often PICO based)

Not necessarily focused on a single question - may describe an overview

Protocol

Includes peer review protocol or plan

No protocol included

Background

Provides summaries of the available literature on a topic

Summarises the available literature

Objectives

Clear objectives are identified

Objectives may or may not be identified

Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria

Criteria is stated before review is conducted

Criteria not always stated

Search Strategy

Comprehensive and systematic (stated in the document)

Strategy not explicitly stated (not always comprehensive or systematic)

Process of Selecting Articles

Usually clear and explicit

Not always described in a literature review

Process of Evaluating Articles

Comprehensive evaluation of study quality

Evaluation of study quality may or may not be included

Process of Extracting Information

Usually clear and specific

Not always clear or explicit

Results & Data Synthesis

Clear summaries of studies based on high quality evidence

Summary based on studies where the quality of the articles may not be specified. May also be influenced by the reviewer's theories, needs and beliefs.

Discussion

Written by an expert or group of experts with a detailed and well grounded knowledge of the issues

Written by an expert or group of experts with a detailed and well grounded knowledge of the issues

 

*Note: there are many types of reviews. Please follow this link to access this reference: Grant, M.J. and Booth, A. (2009), A typology of reviews: an analysis of 14 review types and associated methodologies. Health Information & Libraries Journal, 26: 91-108.

**Produced by Curtin University Library. Follow this link to for their Systematic Review Guide for comparison with other kinds of reviews

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