Addressing Challenges When Applying GRADE to Public Health Guidelines: A Scoping Review Protocol and Pilot Analysis

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Authors

KANTOROVÁ Lucia FRIESSOVÁ Tereza SLEZÁKOVÁ Simona LANGAUFOVÁ Alena KANTOR Jiří MUNN Z. BARKER T. H. KATIKIREDDI S. V. MUSTAFA R. A. ŽULJEVIĆ M. F. LUKEŽIĆ M. KLUGAROVÁ Jitka RIAD Abanoub VRBOVÁ Tereza POKORNÁ Andrea BÚŘILOVÁ Petra BÚŘIL Jiří KIRKOVSKI A. ĆAĆIĆ N. DELAČ L. TOKALIĆ R. POKLEPOVIĆ Peričić T. KLUGAR Miloslav

Year of publication 2022
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Web https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/19/2/992#cite
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19020992
Keywords GRADE; guidelines; public health; methodology; challenges; scoping review protocol
Description This is a protocol for a scoping review that aims to determine how guideline authors using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluations (GRADE) approach have addressed previously identified challenges related to public health. The Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology for scoping reviews will be followed. We will search and screen titles of guidelines for all languages published in 2013-2021 in: the GIN library, BIGG database, Epistemonikos GRADE guidelines repository, GRADEpro Database, MAGICapp, NICE and WHO websites. Two reviewers will independently screen full texts of the documents identified. The following information will be extracted: methods used for identifying different stakeholders and incorporating their perspectives; methods for identification and prioritization of non-health outcomes; methods for determining thresholds for decision-making; methods for incorporating and grading evidence from non-randomized studies; methods for addressing concerns with conditional recommendations in public health; methods for reaching consensus; additional methodological concerns; and any modifications made to GRADE. A combination of directed content analysis and descriptive statistics will be used for data analysis, and the findings presented narratively in a tabular and graphical form. In this protocol, we present the pilot results from 13 identified eligible guidelines issued between January and August 2021. We will publish the full review results when they become available.
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