Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy (SORT): A Patient-Centered Approach to Grading Evidence in the Medical Literature

Michigan State University · Georgetown University · +4 more institutions

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Abstract

A large number of taxonomies are used to rate the quality of an individual study and the strength of a recommendation based on a body of evidence. We have developed a new grading scale that will be used by several family medicine and primary care journals (required or optional), with the goal of allowing readers to learn one taxonomy that will apply to many sources of evidence. Our scale is called the Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy. It addresses the quality, quantity, and consistency of evidence and allows authors to rate individual studies or bodies of evidence. The taxonomy is built around the information mastery framework, which emphasizes the use of patient-oriented outcomes that measure changes in…

Citation impact

1,441
total citations
FWCI
31.25
Percentile
100%
References
32
Citations per year

Authors

7

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Grading (engineering)
  • Medicine
  • Taxonomy (biology)
  • Evidence-based medicine
  • Medical literature
  • Quality of evidence
  • Consistency (knowledge bases)
  • MEDLINE
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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