4.4 Review

Towards a methodology for cluster searching to provide conceptual and contextual richness for systematic reviews of complex interventions: case study (CLUSTER)

期刊

BMC MEDICAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
卷 13, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-13-118

关键词

Bibliographic databases; Database searching; Literature searching; Search strategies; Systematic reviews

资金

  1. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Health Research Project [09/3008/04]
  2. National Institute for Health Research [09/3008/04] Funding Source: researchfish

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Background: Systematic review methodologies can be harnessed to help researchers to understand and explain how complex interventions may work. Typically, when reviewing complex interventions, a review team will seek to understand the theories that underpin an intervention and the specific context for that intervention. A single published report from a research project does not typically contain this required level of detail. A review team may find it more useful to examine a study cluster; a group of related papers that explore and explain various features of a single project and thus supply necessary detail relating to theory and/or context. We sought to conduct a preliminary investigation, from a single case study review, of techniques required to identify a cluster of related research reports, to document the yield from such methods, and to outline a systematic methodology for cluster searching. Methods: In a systematic review of community engagement we identified a relevant project - the Gay Men's Task Force. From a single key pearl citation we conducted a series of related searches to find contextually or theoretically proximate documents. We followed up Citations, traced Lead authors, identified Unpublished materials, searched Google Scholar, tracked Theories, undertook ancestry searching for Early examples and followed up Related projects (embodied in the CLUSTER mnemonic). Results: Our structured, formalised procedure for cluster searching identified useful reports that are not typically identified from topic-based searches on bibliographic databases. Items previously rejected by an initial sift were subsequently found to inform our understanding of underpinning theory (for example Diffusion of Innovations Theory), context or both. Relevant material included book chapters, a Web-based process evaluation, and peer reviewed reports of projects sharing a common ancestry. We used these reports to understand the context for the intervention and to explore explanations for its relative lack of success. Additional data helped us to challenge simplistic assumptions on the homogeneity of the target population. Conclusions: A single case study suggests the potential utility of cluster searching, particularly for reviews that depend on an understanding of context, e. g. realist synthesis. The methodology is transparent, explicit and reproducible. There is no reason to believe that cluster searching is not generalizable to other review topics. Further research should examine the contribution of the methodology beyond improved yield, to the final synthesis and interpretation, possibly by utilizing qualitative sensitivity analysis.

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