Iain Chalmers
Published: 1995
Total Pages: 119
Get eBook
Reviews are needed to provide manageable information on which decisions on health policy, and individual treatment, can bebased. But how can the quality of these reviews be judged? The report of a systematic review, like a primary research paper, contains clear descriptions of the aims of the review, and the materials and methods used by the reviewer. In this book leading practitioners of the science of reviewing health care research illustrate how traditional reviews sometimes arrive at lethally incorrect conclusions and show how the quality of reviews can be improved.