The Development of a New Generic Risk-of-Bias Measure for Systematic Reviews of Surveys

It is important to evaluate risk of bias of the primary studies included in systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Since tools pertinent to surveys are scarce, the goal of the current research was to develop a measure to address this need. In Study 1, an initial list of 10 relevant topics was compile...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gabriel Nudelman, Kathleen Otto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen GOLD/ Leibniz Institute for Psychology 2020-12-01
Series:Methodology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://meth.psychopen.eu/index.php/meth/article/view/4329
Description
Summary:It is important to evaluate risk of bias of the primary studies included in systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Since tools pertinent to surveys are scarce, the goal of the current research was to develop a measure to address this need. In Study 1, an initial list of 10 relevant topics was compiled from previous measures. In Study 2, the list was refined into an eight-item risk-of-bias measure via discussion and a pilot study. In Study 3, experienced researchers used the measure to asses 70 studies, demonstrating high interrater agreement (weighted Kappa = .82). Inexperienced raters also utilized the measure to code 26 different studies included in a prior meta-analysis, which resulted in adequate interrater agreement (weighted Kappa = .64) and excellent convergent validity (r = .66). Thus, the new measure, designed to be accessible and flexible, can increase standardization of risk-of-bias evaluations and contribute to the interpretation of systematic reviews and meta-analytic findings.
ISSN:1614-2241