
SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTER
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Registration of Systematic Review Titles
Please note: this register is for the use of JBI affiliated entities ONLY. Registration of a systematic review title on the JBI website is to promote collaboration between affiliated entities via highlighting current work to other JBI review authors and to recognise that the registered topic is currently in development to avoid any unintended and/or unnecessary duplication of research effort.
Registered systematic reviews that are currently underway are listed below. Protocols for these reviews may already be published or in preparation for publication within six months of initial registration. To avoid duplication, titles in this list should not be replicated by other review authors. Please contact the listed Primary Reviewer or the JBI Synthesis Science Unit if you would like further information about any of these registered reviews.
Registration of titles on this web page does not in any way constitute acceptance of the topic by JBI Evidence Synthesis.
Title | Certified authors | Collaborating Entity or Institution | Date registered | Custom text |
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Fire needle therapy for the treatment of psoriasis: a systematic review and meta-analysis | Xin Li - Yueyang Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai University of TCM |
2019-10-01 | Xin Li - Yueyang Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai University of TCM Any type of psoriasis can be included. The age of patient is between 18 and 70 years old; regardless of men and women, except for pregnant and lactating women; no heart, brain, kidney, liver and gallbladder gastrointestinal diseases and other medical diseases; no systematic treatment of psoriasis in the past one month; volunteered to participate and signed informed consent. Fire needle therapy or fire needle therapy combined with oral medicines, or fire needle therapy combined with oral medicines and topical medicines. |
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Impact of social support during return to work: a scoping review | Christine Guptill - University of Alberta |
2019-09-30 | Christine Guptill - University of Alberta Injured workers The need for social support in the work environment during the return to work process |
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Characteristics of successful nursing mentorship: A scoping review protocol | Simehlani Nyanyiwa |
Centre for Evidence Based Initiatives in Health Care: A JBI Centre of Excellence | 2019-09-25 | Centre for Evidence Based Initiatives in Health Care: A JBI Centre of Excellence
Simehlani Nyanyiwa The review will consider publications that include registered nurses (RN). It will exclude publications that include enrolled nurses, assistant in nursing and nursing students. This review will focus on the characteristics and strategies associated with nursing mentorship within acute care settings. For this review, we will use the following definition of nursing mentorship adopted by the Canadian Nurses Association (CNA) (2004): “mentorship should be described as developing and empowering one another through a voluntary, mutually beneficial long term professional relationship” |
Funding models and total expenditures with primary healthcare in countries with universal health coverage settings: a scoping review | Thiago Barbosa Vivas |
The Brazilian Centre for Evidence-based Healthcare: A JBI Centre of Excellence | 2019-09-25 | The Brazilian Centre for Evidence-based Healthcare: A JBI Centre of Excellence
Thiago Barbosa Vivas We used the PCC (Population, Concept, and Context) mnemonic as a guide to construct a clear and meaningful title and review question for this scoping review. This scoping review will consider studies on countries that have structured universal health coverage (UHC) systems. Studies on countries that have not structured UHC systems will be excluded considering that the health policies in these scenarios, even when grounded on primary healthcare, do not aim to cover all the citizens, specially the poor and vulnerable social groups. Cost-effectiveness studies on specific care settings, as health programs, institutions, organizations, units or services, even when in primary healthcare contexts, will be excluded. The concept interest of this scoping review is the primary healthcare budget policies. We will examine studies that presents, discuss and compare the funding models of the primary healthcare settings on countries that have structured UHC systems. Studies on the total expenditures with primary healthcare settings will also be included, aiming to provide a summary of these expenses. |
Parenting Through A Porthole. Women's experiences of pregnancy following suspected or diagnosed preterm labour at less than 37 weeks' gestation: a systematic review protocol of qualitative evidence. | Kathryn Carruthers |
Teesside Centre for Evidence informed Practice: A JBI Affiliated Group | 2019-09-24 | Teesside Centre for Evidence informed Practice: A JBI Affiliated Group
Kathryn Carruthers Participants must be pregnant at the time of the study. Participants may be first-time pregnant women or have had prior pregnancies and children. Participants will be included regardless of their marital status or age. Participants must be in medically confirmed suspected preterm labour (after examination) or have a diagnosis of spontaneous preterm labour. Threatened preterm labour may start with contractions, preterm pre-labour rupture of the membranes or bleeding. Participants must be less than 37 weeks’ gestation. The participant must have received a medical assessment (via clinical assessment such as history taking, observations, speculum examination, biomarker test or transvaginal ultrasound measurement of cervical length) to define them as being in suspected preterm labour or diagnosed preterm labour. Medically induced, indicated or iatrogenic preterm birth will be excluded. This includes exclusion of previously known planned preterm delivery (for example maternal factors such as pre-eclampsia and obstetric cholestasis). Studies that include infants diagnosed in utero with genetic and chromosomal conditions, congenital neurological problems, birth defects and/or other conditions of the foetus (for example extreme growth restriction) will not be included. Studies based in upper-middle and high income countries as classified by the World Bank will be included (The World Bank, 2019). The World Bank (2019) 'World Bank list of economies'. Available at: https://datahelpdesk.worldbank.org/knowledgebase/articles/906519-world-… (Accessed: 19 September 2019). An annual worldwide figure of 14.84 million babies are estimated to have been born preterm before 37 weeks of gestation in 2014 remaining “a crucial risk in child mortality” and a factor for consideration when improving maternal and newborn care quality (Chawanpaiboon et al., 2018, p. e37). Medical advances in the field of neonatology “have resulted in increased survival rates, particularly among extremely premature infants” which has been “associated with a subsequent increase in morbidity” (Suff et al., 2019, p. 27). Current research has yielded a number of predictors of preterm birth, some of which include cervical length measurement, ultrasound parameters (presence of ‘amniotic fluid sludge’) and biomarkers (fetal fibronectin, inflammatory markers and cytokines vaginal microbiome) (Suff et al., 2019). Tocolysis (suppression of preterm labour) and maternal corticosteroids (steroid medication for the mother) may commence in addition to magnesium sulfate (medication for the mother) when labour is established (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2015). Suff et al. (2019, p. 27) identify the importance of predictive tests for preterm birth, both for reassurance for women who aren’t likely to deliver preterm but also for those considered higher risk “given the huge personal, economic, and health impacts of preterm birth”. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2018, p. 27) specifies that “patient experts explained that preterm labour is associated with substantial anxiety, particularly when a diagnosis is difficult to confirm” and that the “understanding whether preterm labour is established is of considerable importance to pregnant women” further stating the “importance of communicating the risks and benefits associated with the different diagnostic options so that women are able to understand the test results” in addition to explanation of false negative results (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2018, p. 27). Gordon (2019, p. 61), when exploring the experiences of women with threatened preterm labour, identified practice implications for clinicians to “be aware of the anxiety and uncertainty women experience when inconsistent advice is given” along with research suggestions of consideration of “the relationship between stress and anxiety and preterm birth and pregnancy outcome” along with “practices of specialist preterm birth services”. Carson et al. (2015, p. 8), in a prospective cohort study of 12,100 families of which 119 babies were born less than 32 weeks of gestation and 121 babies born between 32-33 weeks of gestation, found that “both mothers and fathers of very preterm babies are approximately twice as likely to experience symptoms of postnatal depression at 9 months postpartum”. Themes drawn from studies post-discharge from the neonatal unit included “living in constant fear”, “need for support” and “guilt feelings, responsibility and compensatory parenting” (Adama et al., 2016, p. 34). Depression, anxiety and post -traumatic stress disorder are conditions prevalent in women with threatened preterm labour and subsequently following preterm birth which may impact on transition to motherhood. Lasiuk et al. (2013) used an interpretive description method via interviews and focus groups with a sample of fourteen parents (11 women and 3 men) to understand parental traumas’ associated with preterm birth, whereas Dagklis et al. (2018, p. 922) quantitatively studied antenatal depression in women hospitalised with threatened preterm labour which the authors state to be the “first study ever conducted to screen for depressive symptoms among pregnant women at risk of preterm labour”. 24.3% of the 103 women were identified as having antenatal depression. The findings are further supported by Pisoni et al. (2016, p. 771) with results showing that “hospitalized parents at risk of preterm delivery develop less attachment to the foetus and higher levels of anxiety and depression” with a recommendation of “promotion of prenatal psychological well-being”. References Adama, E. A., Bayes, S. and Sundin, D. (2016) 'Parents' experiences of caring for preterm infants after discharge from Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: A meta-synthesis of the literature', Journal of Neonatal Nursing, 22(1), pp. 27-51. |
Therapeutic effectiveness of local Botulinum toxin injection on hand tremor severity and upper limb function in patients with Idiopathic Parkinson disease: a systematic review | Fariba Eslamian |
Iranian EBM Centre: A JBI Affiliated Group | 2019-09-23 | Iranian EBM Centre: A JBI Affiliated Group
Fariba Eslamian Patients with Idiopathic Parkinson disease |
Resiliency support to enhance positive health outcomes for police officers in five Anglosphere nations: a scoping review protocol | Audrey Steenbeek |
Aligning Health Needs and Evidence for Transformative Change (AH-NET-C): A JBI Centre of Excellence | 2019-09-23 | Aligning Health Needs and Evidence for Transformative Change (AH-NET-C): A JBI Centre of Excellence
Audrey Steenbeek This scoping review will consider regular police officers (i.e., a role that involves the legitimate use of force and the ability to arrest or detain), military police, border control officers, and federal police/investigators (e.g., FBI or ATF in the US; federal RCMP in Canada). Retired police officers will be excluded. Resiliency support for police officers includes any tools, startegies, programmes and organizational features that enhance positive health outcomes through a. readiness and preparedness, b. response and adaptation, c. recovery and adjustment regardless of condition or work status. |
Contribution of the use of WHO’s safe child birth checklist to maternal and perinatal outcome: a quantitative systematic review | Hailemariam Segni Abawollo |
Ethiopian Evidenced Based Healthcare and Development Centre: A JBI Centre of Excellence | 2019-09-20 | Ethiopian Evidenced Based Healthcare and Development Centre: A JBI Centre of Excellence
Hailemariam Segni Abawollo Pregnant women in labor. Use of WHO’s safe child birth checklist during labor. |
Early intervention services for non-psychotic mental health disorders in mental health: a scoping review | Katie Richards - Kings College London UK |
2019-09-18 | Katie Richards - Kings College London UK Adolescents (≥ 10-17 years) or adults (> 18 years) with a recent-onset threshold or subthreshold mood disorder, anxiety disorder, eating disorder, personality disorder, impulse control or substance use disorder, and/or somatoform disorder Early intervention services for non-psychotic mental health disorders. The format and structure of the service will vary, we will be including services based in the community and in hospitals. The services will form a structured program of care with the level of care can varying from “light-touch” techniques of signposting, information sharing, and self-help resources all the way through to specialized multi-disciplinary teams and high intensity psychiatric support. |
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The effect of pelvic floor muscle exercises on labour and birth outcomes: a systematic review and meta analysis | Sahar Sobhgol - Western Sydney University Australia |
2019-09-17 | Sahar Sobhgol - Western Sydney University Australia Pregnant primiparous or multiparous women with or without pelvic floor dysfunction at baseline All types of antenatal pelvic floor muscle exercises programs with no adjunctive therapy were included |