Study selection (also known as screening) is the process where all the studies and articles identified during your systematic search are reviewed to be included or excluded based on the inclusion/exclusion criteria in your protocol.
Prior to beginning the screening, all search results from your chosen databases and sources should be exported to either a reference management software (EndNote, Zotero, etc.) or an excel document. There may be duplicate records, so it’s best to remove these so that no single article is reviewed twice.
There are two phases of the screening process, the first being title/abstract screening and the second being full-text screening. More details about each phase are described below.
In the Title/Abstract screening stage, each reviewer will need to scan titles and abstracts to see if they match the eligibility criteria or have some value to the systematic review. This is done separately by each reviewer to ensure minimal bias. Often the large majority of search findings is rejected at this step.
In the Full-Text screening stage, each reviewer looks through the full-text of included articles to fine-tune the final collection of articles that will contribute to the review
Reviewing and selection of studies is a time-consuming phase of the systematic review process. The following tools offer a variety of assistance in the screening process including keeping track of decisions, de-duplication, and extracting abstracts from databases and reference management software.