Qualitative synthesis of research on healthcare providers’ perceptions of the transition from in-patient to community palliative care https://t.co/8BCcPWaCYH
A meta-synthesis of qualitative literature on female chronic pelvic pain for the development of a core outcome set: a systematic review @IUJ_BlueJournal https://t.co/h2S67VKX4i
Pleased to learn that my Who Framed Qualitative Synthesis is now available online at YouTube - thanks Evidence Synthesis Ireland:
https://t.co/qcxgFHhqeP
Many congratulations to @KatStrick1 for this excellent meta ethnography exploring how people conceive of "meaningful occupation" for people with #dementia#systematicreview
Synthesis for health services and policy: the craft and science of question formulation and scoping - https://t.co/qSJc6Bz6c9
Our three-way lessons learned report from our NIHR HS&DR rapid evidence centres
A meta-synthesis by Tuohi et al. (2019) that reviews a body of qualitative evidence about "Children and young people’s experiences and perceptions of self-management of type 1 diabetes": Super read! https://t.co/aeDZMm9bnL
'There is a need for more qualitative systematic reviews that focus on women's experiences across the range of maternity service points of care.'
Read more in the JBI Evidence Synthesis editorial at https://t.co/rttdnB09ym
Pleased to be a co-author of this latest slow-burner: GUIDE TO QUALITATIVE EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: EVIDENCE-INFORMED POLICY-MAKING USING RESEARCH IN THE EVIPNET FRAMEWORK https://t.co/gEq8BVyt54
Really interesting talk from @AndreasXyrichis this morning on experiences/perceptions of factors affecting the implementation of telemedicine in critical care. Here's a link to the qualitative evidence synthesis: https://t.co/HzXUkMAOTw
Celebrate Friday with our latest #freedownload State of the Methods article: All you wanted to know about qualitative evidence synthesis (QES) but were afraid to ask! A student’s and novice reviewer's guide to QES @ktflemm@jane_noyes@CochraneQual
https://t.co/vM2w3ax5jC
Systematic review of the methodological literature for integrating qualitative evidence syntheses into health guideline development from @QESophile et al https://t.co/t7f4VNQxtV
Our paper just out today - all you ever wanted to know about QES but were afraid to ask- of help to students and novices alike
Qualitative Evidence Synthesis: Where Are We at? - Kate Flemming, Jane Noyes, 2021 https://t.co/B04Mjb89RP @jane_noyes@CochraneQual
@SAGEHealthInfo @CochraneQual Many QES methodologies are designed to develop new theory and new insights that were not apparent at the level of primary studies. My own Journal of Advanced Nursing welcomes high quality QES reviews as they are highly cited and used by decision-makers.
@SAGEHealthInfo Thanks for your response. While some more aggreagative reviews summarise what is known, many syntheses DO produce new knowledge, generate theory and enhance transferability of findings. It’s a shame QHR will no longer publish these important works.
.@SAGEHealthInfo We've noticed that Qualitative Health Research is no longer accepting systematic reviews/evidence synthesis papers.
Can you help us to understand what led to this change in policy? Syntheses can help with practice & policy decisions and are often highly cited