1 / 69

USING THE LITERATURE Finding and evaluating evidence and information

USING THE LITERATURE Finding and evaluating evidence and information. Dr Peter Orpin UDRH Ms Danielle Williams MRI. Using the Literature. What question/puzzle/issue are you trying to find information on, or an answer to? Searching the literature Constructing a review of the literature

brigit
Download Presentation

USING THE LITERATURE Finding and evaluating evidence and information

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. USING THE LITERATUREFinding and evaluating evidence and information Dr Peter Orpin UDRH Ms Danielle Williams MRI

  2. Using the Literature • What question/puzzle/issue are you trying to find information on, or an answer to? • Searching the literature • Constructing a review of the literature • Assessing credibility • Writing a literature review • Using the evidence – is it significant and is it ‘significant’ University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  3. PURPOSE: Form follows function Be clear in your own mind what function your literature review is intended to fulfil Reviewing the Literature Writing a Literature Review University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  4. Reviewing the Literature • Systematic - but no trite formulas • Wide-ranging/eclectic • Unpredictable (and frustrating) • Obtain or construct a bibliographic database - EndNote • Construct your review in writing as you go • Progressively focussed over time – the trick is to know when to stop fishing and start focussing • Continuous task – keep reading • Much of what has to be done won’t make it into your literature review. University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  5. SET THE WIDER CONTEXT/THE FIELD OF KNOWLEDGE SITUATE YOUR AREA OF INTEREST IN THAT CONTEXT IDENTIFY THE GAPS AND PUZZLES – THE SPECIFIC QUESTION TO ANSWER CONSTRUCT YOUR DETAILED ARGUMENT University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  6. The way I approach it • Browse widely using titles and abstracts • Download full text only when I need to read the whole paper – i.e. I can’t get what I need from the abstract • All references into Endnote at download • Begin constructing literature review from first reference read – use Outline View for brainstorming structure • Add references to structure using notes and Endnote references • Further sort and construct my argument using thematic analysis University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  7. The Systematic Literature Review • Transparent and pre-determined search strategy: • Well defined question • Defined set of keywords • Defined set of databases • Advantages • Transparent (rigour) and repeatable • Disadvantage • Limited, although may be a post-facto construction University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  8. An Example • Definitions • Young-old 65-74; old-old 75-84; oldest-old 85+ {Scott, 1997 #2753}- characteristics of ageing vary across these categories • Demography • Major driver of an ageing society is increasing survival rates at later age – i.e. people in their 80s, 90 and even 100s are less likely to die – paper posits genetic and non-genetic (environmental) interactions {Vaupel, 1998 #2875} • Engagement/Disengagement • Continuity important in old friendships {Shea, 1988 #2798} • Gender • Two point cross-sectional study - higher levels of instrumental support associated with greater onset of disabilities of daily living in men but not women – independent of baseline disability – possibly receiving instrumental support leads to loss of self-efficacy and self image {Seeman, 1996 #2760} • Social network support correlated more with psychological health in women and physical health in men {Seeman, 1996 #2760} University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  9. Evidence for What? – Defining the Question The Task (a program logic approach): • What do you ultimately want to do with the information/evidence you find? • What questions and sub-questions do you need to ask of the literature? University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  10. Some Searching Tips • Think outside the box; be adventurous; play - it only costs you time • Keywords – find the key that opens the door • Follow the trials • Range wide at first – narrow as you go • Learn to skim: Sort by titles, then abstracts and only then full-text • Keep a running record • Construct your argument as you go University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  11. Gathering the Evidence - Sources • Web Searching • Databases • Bibliographies • Systematic and Literature Reviews http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query/static/clinical.shtml#studycat • Library Browsing • Journals – electronic journals on the web • Networks • Professional • Interest • Conferences/Seminars • List Serves University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  12. Web Searching • Search Engines - Google • Google Scholar - http://scholar.google.com/ • Live Search Academic http://search.live.com/results.aspx?scope=academic&q= • Advanced Searching - CrossSearch • http://www.utas.edu.au/library/info/crosssearch/crosssearch.html • AskNow http://www.asknow.gov.au/index2.html • Deep/Invisible Web • Complete Planet • Health Portals • Professional Bodies - • Government - • NGOs • Universities/Research Centres • Libraries University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  13. Gathering the Evidence – Database Searching • Training resources • Keywords – Thesaurus, ‘Exploding’ terms • Cited reference search – articles citing an author or a paper • Using Booleans • And – all terms together within a record • Or – any of the terms within a record • Not – exclude records containing that term • Same – all terms within same sentence • Using ‘ ‘ to encompass phrases • Field Tags – which fields of record e.g. Ti – title Au - author • Extenders/Wildcards/Truncation – replace range letters • End or middle but not beginning. E.g. * = 0-n characters $ = 0-1 character • Limiting searches – dates, language, article type • Alerts University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  14. Meta-Analysis Letting the experts do the work • Review Collaborations • Cochrane Collaboration • Campbell Collaboration • Best Practice/Treatment Guidelines • Government – Omni, Health Insite • NGOs • Professional Bodies • Journals • Review Articles – Handout 7.1 Comparing Reviews University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  15. Assessing Review Articles Handout 7.1 Opinion Piece Traditional Lit. Review Summary/Appraisal of Selected Research Systematic Reviews • Increasing: • Scope/depth, • System, • Transparency • in the selection of literature Decreasing: Potential for hidden bias University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  16. University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  17. University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  18. Standard Search University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  19. Standard Search - Medicine University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  20. Advanced Search University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  21. Thesaurus University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  22. Alerts University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  23. University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  24. University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  25. University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  26. University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  27. Government Sponsored Site University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  28. Academic Site University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  29. Journal Site University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  30. Out of left field! University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  31. Assessing Credibility: A couple of tips • Judge individual papers in the context of the literature overall not in isolation – that’s why you construct a running critical analysis • If you are not methodologically competent and/or confident rely on source credibility and validity University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  32. Threats to Evidence Credibility • BIAS: • Is there adequate bias control - in sampling, interpretation, attrition, reporting - through sound methodology? • UNSUPPORTED CAUSAL ASSUMPTIONS • Is there a causal link or only a correlation or covariance? • INAPPROPRIATE GENERALISATION • What degree of generalisation is justified by the sampling methodology? • ATTRIBUTING REAL STATUS TO CHANCE FINDINGS • Is the result STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT? Inferential statistics: How confidently can the results from a sample be applied to the whole population from which it is drawn? University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  33. Evaluating Studies – How credible is the evidence? • How credible is the source • What levels of evidence does it constitute? • What sample and how was it selected? • Does the sample support the generalisation or transferability claims? • What possible sources of bias and are they controlled? • Reliability and validity of measures • Judging qualitative versus quantitative studies • Interpretation – are there causal inferences and are they supportable University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  34. Getting someone else to do the work: Assessing Review Articles Opinion Piece Traditional Lit. Review Summary/Appraisal of Selected Research Systematic Reviews (e.g. Cochrane Collaboration http://www.cochrane.org) • Increasing: • Scope/depth, • System, • Transparency • in the selection of literature Decreasing: Potential for hidden bias University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  35. 1. Assessing Source Credibility • Publication Type • Journal Article – academic/professional • Conference proceedings - Standing • Reports • Web Documents – publisher/sponsor • News-letters; Mass media – links to original source • Publishing Organisation • Government • Academic • Professional Bodies • NGOs • Peer Review Process • Journal Rankings University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  36. 2. Study Types • Observational – ‘real world’ [Epidemiological – revealing patterns through counts] • Descriptive • Analytical • Ecological/Correlational • Cross-sectional – Longitudinal • Case Control • Cohort • Experimental • Randomised controlled trials • Field and community trials University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  37. Observational Studies 1 • Simple Descriptive– routine population data examined for patterns – prevalence surveys • Ecological/Correlational– Comparing: • Same population different times • Different populations at same time • Cross-sectional and/or Longitudinal– Compare prevalence rates of study phenomenon and hypothesised causal variable University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  38. Observational Studies 2 • Case Control - Subjects selected by condition status: • Cases –condition present • Controls – condition absent • Cohort Studies– study comparing condition prevalence rates over time in two groups – one exposed to hypothesised causative variable, one not. • Case Reports/Case Series University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  39. Experimental/Intervention • Randomised Control Trial (RCT) A variation on the prospective cohort (experimental /control) study under researcher controlled conditions • Controls can be: • Unblinded • Cross-over • Blinded • Double blinded • Advantages • Good bias and variable control • Best for testing causative hypotheses • Disadvantages • Feasibility • Cost • Limits on generalisability University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  40. NHMRC Levels of Evidence I - Systematic review of all relevant RCTs II - At least one properly designed RCT III-1 - One well-designed pseudo-randomised trial III-2 – Un-randomised comparative, cohort, case control, time series without control studies IV Case series, pre-test – post-test studies University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  41. Sampling and Generalisation Sample: [The units actually measured] Sampling Frame: [The list from which the sample is selected] Population: [The group the sample seeks to generalise to] University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  42. 4. Sampling 2 • Random • Each individual element of the study population has exactly the same chance of being chosen • Allows the use of inferential statistics – error estimate in generalising from the sample to the study population • Results can be applied only to population within that frame • Simple random – all units numbered • Systematic random –a system approach to identify study units University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  43. Sampling 3 • Stratified/Structured Sampling • Elements drawn randomly from homogeneous sub-groups in proportion to their representation in the study population e.g. age groupings, gender. • Overlaid on simple random or systematic random • Relies on accurate data on subgroup distribution • Cluster Sampling • Multi-stage process where an exhaustive list of all individual elements in the study population is unavailable • Stage 1 – identify groups of elements (clusters) • Stage 2 – randomly sample these groups • Stage 3 – randomly sample elements within the groups • Process of list and sample can work through multiple layers for very large populations. University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  44. Sampling 4 – Non-random • Limited generalisability/transferability • Not amenable to error and significance calculation – unless shown to conform to normal distribution curve. • Purposive Sample • Non-random – based on purpose of the study and researchers knowledge of the population • Convenience Sample • Non-random – based on available/convenient elements e.g snowball sampling University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  45. Sampling Issues • Power: is the sample size sufficient to avoid statistically falsely rejecting a true finding – i.e. falsely upholding the null (no difference) hypothesis. • Sampling Frame: is the list of elements from which the sample is chosen: • Clearly defined: and, • appropriate for making findings about the study population • Generalizability: Does the sample size, selection method and composition support generalising the findings to the study population. University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  46. 5. Bias and Controls • Bias:quality in measurement method which leads to misrepresentation of the measure in a particular direction • Selection bias – addressed by randomisation • Sample selection – do all elements have an equal chance of being selected • Intervention – do all subjects have an equal chance of being allocated to a treatment or control group • Detection bias – addressed by blinding • Is there a conscious or unconscious tendency to interpret findings in a way that supports a particular outcome or hypothesis University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  47. Bias and Controls 2 • Attrition bias – are results skewed because of bias in dropout • Reporting bias – is there any bias in the way in which study outcomes are selected for report – successful or unusual - unique cases are interesting but not generalisable. • Controls • Matched to intervention sample in all important variables apart from intervention itself – can be a bold assumption • Will account for unknown confounding variables if these are evenly distributed in intervention and control groups – best achieved by randomisation University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  48. 6. Reliability of Measures Are results reproducible, the findings robust: • By the same researchers across time and study repeats? • By other researchers using the same methodology • Using other methodologies and instruments – triangulation/crytallisation • Is it consistent across a range of conditions University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  49. Validity Theoretically – Veracity; is it a ‘true’ measure of the phenomenon under study? Practically and generally - Does it make logical sense in terms of what else we know? • Face validity: is it congruent with widely shared knowledge and understandings • Predictive validity: does it accord to findings using related or dependent measures • Construct validity: (social science)does it fit into a known logical relationship between variables • Content validity: (social science)does it cover the range of possible meanings around a concept/variable University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

  50. 7. Interpretation – Causal Inferences • Correlation does not equal causality • The Hume Problem: we can refute hypotheses but while results can support hypotheses, they cannot ‘prove’ them • Some tests: • Reliability – study quality • Temporality – does the imputed cause precede the effect? • Strength of relationship • Consistency – does it hold across studies and conditions? • Plausibility – does it make sense? • Dose-exposure response – does change in cause reliably result in an equivalent change in effect? • Are there other possible explanations? – confounding variables University Department of Rural Health, Tasmania

More Related