The Promise and Pitfalls of Systematic Reviews

Posted: 10 Jan 2008

See all articles by Patricia D. Mullen

Patricia D. Mullen

University of Texas at Houston - Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth)

Gilbert Ramírez

College of Health Services

Abstract

The systematic review "movement" that has transformed medical journal reports of clinical trials and reviews of clinical trials has taken hold in public health, with the most recent milestone, the publication of the first edition of The Guide to Community Health Services in 2005. In this paper we define and distinguish current terms, point out important resources for systematic reviews, describe the impact of systematic review on the quality of primary studies and summaries of the evidence, and provide perspectives on the promise of systematic reviews for shaping the agenda for public health research. Several pitfalls are discussed, including a false sense of rigor implied by the terms "systematic review" and "meta-analysis" and substantial variation in the validity of claims that a particular intervention is "evidence based," and the difficulty of translating conclusions from systematic reviews into public health advocacy and practice.

Keywords: meta-analysis, review literature, guidelines, public health, intervention studies

Suggested Citation

Mullen, Patricia D. and Ramírez, Gilbert, The Promise and Pitfalls of Systematic Reviews. Annual Review of Public Health, Vol. 27, April 2006, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1082454

Patricia D. Mullen (Contact Author)

University of Texas at Houston - Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) ( email )

6431 Fannin Street
Houston, TX 77030
United States

Gilbert Ramírez

College of Health Services ( email )

Des Moines, ID 50312
United States

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