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. 2015 Aug 31;31(4):527–537. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czv079

Table 4.

Evidence synthesis framework—technical characteristics of different forms of evidence synthesis outputs

Evidence synthesis outputs based on a broad thematic overview
Evidence synthesis outputs based on a specific question
Commonly used name Annotated bibliography Evidence map Scoping review State of the art review Rapid review Literature review Review of reviews Evidence paper Mixed methods research synthesis Systematic review
Quality appraisal of evidence Limited Limited Limited Limited Limited Limited Essential Essential Essential Essential
Evidence usually presented as Reference list Graphics and tables Narrative and tables Narrative, graphics and tables Narrative and tables Narrative Narrative, graphics and tables Narrative and tables Narrative, graphics and tables Narrative and tables
Systematic documentation of evidence Limited Comprehensive Limited Limited Comprehensive Comprehensive Comprehensive Comprehensive Comprehensive Comprehensive
Replicable Low Medium Low Low Medium Medium Medium Low Medium High
Periodic update Possible Possible Possible Possible Possible Possible Essential Possible Possible Essential
Limitations Does not synthesize or analyse findings across sources Overview, not in-depth analysis May have: A narrow focus question -Evidence base not comprehensive, limited to most recent scientific information Evidence base not comprehensive Prone to selection and publication bias - tends to review readily available evidence Does not include research outside existing reviews Limited accessibility to literature Time consuming and resource intensive Resource intensive (time, human, financial)
Generally does not appraise evidence Does not synthesize or analyse findings across sources Few search sources May be prone to bias Relies on easily accessible/ available evidence Often limited detail on search strategies, or how conclusions reached Because reviews are of variable quality, each needs to be assessed for how systematic and comprehensive it is Time/human resource constraints likely to limit scope May have a narrow clinical question or set of questions
Prone to selection and publication bias A range of evidence may be covered, but generally relies on few search sources Use only key terms for search (not all variants) Prone to selection and publication bias Resources determine scope, which may limit comprehensive-ness or lead to inconclusive findings Limited literature search Has a history of use in health and education; yet to be fully tested in other development areas, e.g. governance and climate change
Prone to selection and publication bias Be limited to electronic and easily available documents Risk of generating inconclusive findings that provide a weak answer to the original question
; A simple description with limited analysis