Journal article

Living systematic review: 1. Introduction—the why, what, when, and how

JH Elliott, A Synnot, T Turner, M Simmonds, EA Akl, S McDonald, G Salanti, J Meerpohl, H MacLehose, J Hilton, D Tovey, I Shemilt, J Thomas, T Agoritsas, C Perron, R Hodder, C Pestridge, L Albrecht, T Horsley, J Platt Show all

Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | Published : 2017

Abstract

Systematic reviews are difficult to keep up to date, but failure to do so leads to a decay in review currency, accuracy, and utility. We are developing a novel approach to systematic review updating termed “Living systematic review” (LSR): systematic reviews that are continually updated, incorporating relevant new evidence as it becomes available. LSRs may be particularly important in fields where research evidence is emerging rapidly, current evidence is uncertain, and new research may change policy or practice decisions. We hypothesize that a continual approach to updating will achieve greater currency and validity, and increase the benefits to end users, with feasible resource requirement..

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University of Melbourne Researchers