Author: Metzendorf, Mariaâ€Inti; Featherstone, Robin M.
Title: Evaluation of the comprehensiveness, accuracy and currency of the Cochrane COVIDâ€19 Study Register for supporting rapid evidence synthesis production Cord-id: xkc4m3ml Document date: 2021_6_5
ID: xkc4m3ml
Snippet: INTRODUCTION: The Cochrane COVIDâ€19 Study Register (CCSR) is a public, continually updated database of COVIDâ€19 study references. The aim of this studyâ€based register is to support rapid and living evidence synthesis, including an evidence ecosystem of COVIDâ€19 research (CEOsys). In November and December 2020 we conducted an evaluation of the CCSR for CEOsys, measured its performance and identified areas for improvement. METHODS: For the evaluation we generated a purposive sample of 286
Document: INTRODUCTION: The Cochrane COVIDâ€19 Study Register (CCSR) is a public, continually updated database of COVIDâ€19 study references. The aim of this studyâ€based register is to support rapid and living evidence synthesis, including an evidence ecosystem of COVIDâ€19 research (CEOsys). In November and December 2020 we conducted an evaluation of the CCSR for CEOsys, measured its performance and identified areas for improvement. METHODS: For the evaluation we generated a purposive sample of 286 studies from 20 reviews to calculate the CCSR's comprehensiveness (sensitivity), accuracy (correctly classified and linked studies) and currency (time to publish and process references). RESULTS: Our sample showed that the CCSR had an overall comprehensiveness of 77.2%, with the highest coverage for interventional studies (94.4%). The study register had 100% coverage for trial registry records, 86.5% for journal articles and 52.4% for preprints. 98.3% of references were correctly classified with regard to study type, and 93.4% with regard to study aim. 89% of studies were correctly linked. 81.4% of references were published to the register in under 30 days, with 0.5 day (median) for trial registry records, 2 days for journal articles and 56 days for preprints. CONCLUSION: The CCSR had high comprehensiveness, accurate study classifications and short publishing times for journal articles and trial registry records in the sample. We identified that coverage and publishing time for preprints needed improvement. Finally, the evaluation illustrated the value of a studyâ€based register for identifying additional study references for analysis in evidence synthesis.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents- Try single phrases listed below for: 1
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date