Single screening versus conventional double screening for study selection in systematic reviews: a methodological systematic review
Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care · Witten/Herdecke University
Abstract
Stringent requirements exist regarding the transparency of the study selection process and the reliability of results. A 2-step selection process is generally recommended; this is conducted by 2 reviewers independently of each other (conventional double-screening). However, the approach is resource intensive, which can be a problem, as systematic reviews generally need to be completed within a defined period with a limited budget. The aim of the following methodological systematic review was to analyse the evidence available on whether single screening is equivalent to double screening in the screening process conducted in systematic reviews.
We searched Medline, PubMed and the Cochrane Methodology Register (last search 10/2018). We also used supplementary search techniques and sources ("similar articles" function in PubMed, conference abstracts and reference lists). We included all evaluations comparing single with double screening. Data were summarized in a structured, narrative way.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 31.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 19
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Systematic review
- MEDLINE
- Medicine
- Meta-analysis
- Cochrane Library
- Family medicine
- Medical physics
- Pathology