Table 2.
Terminology preference | Example quotations |
---|---|
Scoping review | •“It is a review of the literature in this area similar to a systematic review. A study seems reserved from primary research with study participants.” • “Seems to me that the term review is more specific than study, and that’s what it seems to be: a review of the existing literature.” • “The name should reflect that standard review methods are used: search strategy, selection, data abstraction, and analysis (even if only descriptive). Reviews are still studies. Are some scoping studies not reviews?” • “The method is a form of a review of primary literature. Some scoping reviews gather primary data in the form of a stakeholder consultation but that is for the purpose of directing the synthesis and that alone does not provide a rationale for using the term ‘study’. We can limit terminology issues by choosing one term and of the two, study or review, review is a more accurate description of what it is.” • “The methodology of the scoping review is consistent with methods of evidence synthesis such as systematic reviews and meta-analysis methods, thus using the term ‘review’ defines the methodology more clearly than ‘study’.” • “The term “review” aligns with the purpose of the research (that at least I was aiming to use the methodology for). It was to review what was published in the literature, and to do so in a somewhat systematic way. Although it technically is a “study”, calling it a “review” seems to be more precise in my mind.” |
Scoping study | • “Takes into account the analysis (thematic) component which differs from mere summary or synthesis in other types of reviews.” • “Use of the term scoping review positions this type of study in a hierarchical relationship with systematic review. Scoping studies have distinct goals and thus should be viewed as distinct entities and not as “less than” systematic reviews.” • “Additionally, the intent is not only to review the literature but to conceptualize it in a manner that speaks to the research question. I do not feel that the term ‘review’ covers the extent of analytic work of this type of study.” • “Clearer language. The use of the term “study” would also help to move away from scoping review, which seems to have become a catch-all term for everything that is not a systematic review.” • “Encompasses the entire methodology - the literature (or evidence) review phase as well as the consultation phase. It is also the original term coined by Arksey and O’Malley.” |
Unsure; no opinion; depends on the study | • “I see advantages and disadvantages to both. I need better understanding of methodology to better answer the question.” • “It should be either, depending on whether or not something other than a review (e.g. a scoping survey) is carried out.” |