23c. Discussion – Limitations of the review processes
Discuss any limitations of the review processes used
Essential elements
- Discuss any limitations of the review processes used and comment on the potential impact of each limitation.
Explanation
Discussing limitations, avoidable or unavoidable, in the review process should help readers understand the trustworthiness of the review findings. For example, authors might acknowledge the decision to restrict eligibility to studies in English only, search only a small number of databases, have only one reviewer screen records or collect data, or not contact study authors to clarify unclear information. They might also acknowledge that they were unable to access all potentially eligible study reports or to carry out some of the planned analyses because of insufficient data.12 While some limitations may affect the validity of the review findings, others may not.
Example
“Because of time constraints…we dually screened only 30% of the titles and abstracts; for the rest, we used single screening. A recent study showed that single abstract screening misses up to 13% of relevant studies (Gartlehner 2020). In addition, single review authors rated risk of bias, conducted data extraction and rated certainty of evidence. A second review author checked the plausibility of decisions and the correctness of data. Because these steps were not conducted dually and independently, we introduced some risk of error…Nevertheless, we are confident that none of these methodological limitations would change the overall conclusions of this review. Furthermore, we limited publications to English and Chinese languages. Because COVID-19 has become a rapidly evolving pandemic, we might have missed recent publications in languages of countries that have become heavily affected in the meantime (e.g. Italian or Spanish).”3
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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