- Framework of problems / Objective
- Failure to define clinically meaningful outcomes
- Characteristics and quality of systematic reviews of acupuncture, herbal medicines, and homeopathy
Ref ID | 767 |
First Author | K. Linde |
Journal | COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE RESEARCH |
Year Of Publishing | 2003 |
URL | https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/1218525 |
Keywords |
Complimentary & Alternative Low reporting quality Overlapping reviews/redundancy |
Problem(s) |
Failure to define clinically meaningful outcomes Poor execution of narrative synthesis Intervention not described / defined Redundant / overlapping / duplicated review question; leads to research waste |
Number of systematic reviews included | 115 |
Summary of Findings | From 115 systematic reviews of complimentary therapies (39 on acupuncture, 58 on herbal medicine, 18 on homeopathy) the methodological quality of reviews was highly variable. Deficiencies were most frequent for the description of the selection process and the summary of the results of primary studies. |
Did the article find that the problem(s) led to qualitative changes in interpretation of the results? | Not Applicable |
Are the methods of the article described in enough detail to replicate the study? | No |