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Has established a place for itself
The recent publication by the NHS Centre for Reviews
and Dissemination of the second edition of the guidance on undertaking systematic reviews of research on effectiveness deserves to be warmly
welcomed, for many reasons.1 Perhaps chief among these is
the increased recognition given to the diverse types of evidence that
can contribute to systematic reviews. This suggests that the rigid
insistence on controlled trials as the sole source of evidence on
effectiveness that characterised the beginnings of the evidence based
healthcare movement is fading. Qualitative research is now given
explicit consideration in the new guidance. This is consistent with
other recent recommendations emphasising the contribution of
qualitative evidence to healthcare evaluation.2 The
argument for giving a place to qualitative research in systematic reviews seems to have been won. There remain several issues, however, that need to be addressed in making the role of qualitative evidence in
reviews more systematic.
The move to recognise the potential value of qualitative research
could do much to address arguments that evidence based health care has
tended to focus on those variables that can be easily measured and has
lacked a critical perspective, particularly with respect to social and
educational interventions. For example, it is intuitively obvious that
a recent Cochrane review could have benefited from using qualitative
research to assess how we can improve communication with children and
adolescents about their cancer.3 The outcome of the
decision to focus solely on controlled trials and before and after
studies was that only six of 1500 identified studies were included in
the review, and few firm conclusions could be reached. Clearly a more
inclusive view of what constitutes evidence is necessary to answer
such complex questions, as well as acknowledgement of the
explanatory power of non-quantitative forms of evidence.
Qualitative research has, of course, already contributed to a
number of published reviews, though rarely of the Cochrane type and
often in relatively informal ways. Several issues still need to be
dealt with to make the role of qualitative evidence in reviews more
systematic. Firstly, the centre's guidance rightly emphasises the need
for rigour in the identification of research. However, despite efforts
by the centre and the University of London's Institute of Education,
among others, searching for and identifying appropriate qualitative
research remains frustrating and difficult. This is partly because
there is no equivalent of the Cochrane controlled trials register or
other clinical trials registers for qualitative research
(qualitative research is catalogued on a wide range of databases or
not at all) and partly because indexes and search filters require
substantial improvement. Investment in these areas is needed,
especially if reviewers are to demonstrate that their searches are
systematic and exhaustive.
Secondly, the problem of how to appraise the quality of qualitative
studies remains. Directly applying the models developed for
quantitative evidence is inappropriate: constructing hierarchies of
evidence for types of qualitative research studies is clearly problematic, as the guidance highlighted, and undesirable. More generally, there has been a failure to agree on suitable methods for
assessing the quality of qualitative research. This has inhibited the
development of a process similar to CONSORT, which aims to improve the
reporting of clinical trials.4 Qualitative research is a
priority for the National Health Service's research and development methodology programme (inherited from the health technology assessment programme). We need to reach the stage soon where the accepted criteria
provide guidelines for judging a paper, for deciding whether it should
be included in a review, and on how to weight it.
Thirdly, a formidable question is how to make qualitative
evidence A place for qualitative research in systematic reviews now seems
established. A Cochrane qualitative methods network has existed since
1998. Like other groups that seek to move forward to a more inclusive
view of evidence that nevertheless remains systematic, it has its
work Department of Epidemiology and Public health, University of
Leicester, Leicester LE1 6TP (md11{at}le.ac.uk) Division of Public Health and Primary Health Care, Institute of
Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford OX3 7LF
(Raymond.Fitzpatrick{at}nuffield.ox.ac.uk)
which may be produced with widely varying theoretical
perspectives and diverse analytical approaches
submit to the
disciplines of secondary summary and synthesis. More progress must be
made on methods for synthesising qualitative data from across studies and synthesising qualitative and quantitative data. A daunting array of
theoretical and practical problems awaits reviewers who attempt the
secondary manipulation of the concepts or themes that are the staple
product of qualitative research. A natural tension exists between an
approach that relies on interpretation and reflection (qualitative
research) and an approach that seeks to expunge the potential for
anarchy associated with such ungovernable processes (the systematic
review). Bayesian approaches to meta-analysis offer hope of
synthesising qualitative
or qualitative and quantitative
forms of
data, by treating qualitative research as a resource for identifying variables for synthesis and attaching weights to the strength of
evidence associated with those variables.5 However
promising these approaches are, systematic means of more narrative
based and other forms of synthesis for qualitative research are clearly needed.
valuable as it is
cut out.
Ray Fitzpatrick
Some ideas expressed here draw on the authors' research funded by the Economic and Social Research Council to investigate the meta-analysis of qualitative and quantitative evidence.
| 1. | NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination. Undertaking systematic reviews of research on effectiveness: CRD's guidance for those carrying out or commissioning reviews. York: CRD, 2001. Report number 4 (2nd ed). |
| 2. |
Campbell M, Fitzpatrick R, Haines A, Kinmonth AL, Sandercock P, Spiegelhalter D, et al.
Framework for design and evaluation of complex interventions to improve health.
BMJ
2000;
321:
694-696 |
| 3. | Scott JT, Entwistle VA, Sowden AJ, Watt I. Communicating with children and adolescents about their cancer (Cochrane Review). In: The Cochrane Library 2 Oxford: Update Software, 2001. |
| 4. |
Bossuyt PMM.
Better standards for better reporting of RCTS.
BMJ
2001;
322:
1317-1318 |
| 5. | Dixon-Woods M, Fitzpatrick R, Roberts K. Including qualitative research in systematic reviews: problems and opportunities. J Eval Clin Pract 2001; 7: 125-133[CrossRef][Medline]. |
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