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Systematic Reviews & Evidence Synthesis

Learn about the systematic review and evidence synthesis process

Types of Evidence Synthesis

Systematic Review

  • Systematically and transparently collect and categorize existing evidence on a broad question of scientific, policy or management importance.

  • Compares, evaluates, and synthesizes evidence in a search for the effect of an intervention. 

  • Time-intensive and often take months to a year or more to complete. 

  • The most commonly referred to type of evidence synthesis. Sometimes confused as a blanket term for other types of reviews.

​​Literature (Narrative) Review

  • Not a true evidence synthesis review,  but a broad term referring to reviews with a wide scope and non-standardized methodology. 

  • Search strategies, comprehensiveness, and time range covered will vary and do not follow an established protocol.

​Scoping Review or Evidence Map

  • Systematically and transparently collect and categorize existing evidence on a broad question of scientific, policy or management importance.

  • Seeks to identify research gaps and opportunities for evidence synthesis rather than searching for the effect of an intervention. 

  • May critically evaluate existing evidence, but does not attempt to synthesize the results in the way a systematic review would. (see EE Journal and CIFOR)

  • May take longer than a systematic review.

  • See Arksey and O'Malley (2005) for methodological guidance.

​Rapid Review

  • Applies Systematic Review methodology within a time-constrained setting.

  • Employs methodological "shortcuts" (limiting search terms for example) at the risk of introducing bias.

  • Useful for addressing issues needing quick decisions, such as developing policy recommendations.

  • See Evidence Summaries: The Evolution of a Rapid Review Approach

Umbrella Review

  • Reviews other systematic reviews on a topic. 

  • Often defines a broader question than is typical of a traditional systematic review.

  • Most useful when there are competing interventions to consider.

Meta-analysis

  • Statistical technique for combining the findings from disparate quantitative studies.

  • Uses statistical methods to objectively evaluate, synthesize, and summarize results.

  • May be conducted independently or as part of a systematic review.

Methodology Decision Tree

 

Credit: Cornell University Library's Evidence Synthesis guide.