When conducting an assessment of existing literature, various types of literature reviews can be utilized. More specifically, each type has its advantages, disadvantages, and ideal circumstances in which it should be used. This paper explores the systematic review, scoping review, and rapid review in the context of research that seeks to assess existing health care programs. Evidence suggests that the systematic review is the most rigorous and in-depth, but often takes a significant amount of time to complete. The scoping review is less rigorous and used to identify what is known about a specific topic in the literature. The rapid review is similar in rigour to the systematic review, but takes less time and is often used in situations where...
INTRODUCTION:Rapid reviews (RR), using abbreviated systematic review (SR) methods, are becoming more...
Although systematic reviews are the method of choice to synthesize scientific evidence, they can tak...
AbstractSystematic literature reviews (SRs) are a way of synthesising scientific evidence to answer ...
Abstract Background Health care decision makers often...
Many health professionals, students and academics including health researchers will have grappled wi...
Abstract: Approaches for rapid reviews that focus on streamlining systematic review methods are not ...
As our current healthcare practice and policy increasingly relies on clear and comprehensive summari...
Objectives: This review assessed current practice in the preparation of rapid reviews by health tech...
Background: Rapid reviews have the potential to overcome a key barrier to the use of research eviden...
Background: Hundreds of studies of maternity care interventions have been published, too many for mo...
Background: Hundreds of studies of maternity care interventions have been published, too many for mo...
INTRODUCTION: Rapid reviews are being produced with greater frequency by health technology assessmen...
Systematic reviews are a type of literature review in which authors systematically search for, criti...
Abstract Background Rapid reviews are a form of knowl...
Although this Journal regularly accepts narrative rather than systematic reviews, the aim of this sh...
INTRODUCTION:Rapid reviews (RR), using abbreviated systematic review (SR) methods, are becoming more...
Although systematic reviews are the method of choice to synthesize scientific evidence, they can tak...
AbstractSystematic literature reviews (SRs) are a way of synthesising scientific evidence to answer ...
Abstract Background Health care decision makers often...
Many health professionals, students and academics including health researchers will have grappled wi...
Abstract: Approaches for rapid reviews that focus on streamlining systematic review methods are not ...
As our current healthcare practice and policy increasingly relies on clear and comprehensive summari...
Objectives: This review assessed current practice in the preparation of rapid reviews by health tech...
Background: Rapid reviews have the potential to overcome a key barrier to the use of research eviden...
Background: Hundreds of studies of maternity care interventions have been published, too many for mo...
Background: Hundreds of studies of maternity care interventions have been published, too many for mo...
INTRODUCTION: Rapid reviews are being produced with greater frequency by health technology assessmen...
Systematic reviews are a type of literature review in which authors systematically search for, criti...
Abstract Background Rapid reviews are a form of knowl...
Although this Journal regularly accepts narrative rather than systematic reviews, the aim of this sh...
INTRODUCTION:Rapid reviews (RR), using abbreviated systematic review (SR) methods, are becoming more...
Although systematic reviews are the method of choice to synthesize scientific evidence, they can tak...
AbstractSystematic literature reviews (SRs) are a way of synthesising scientific evidence to answer ...