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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/16804
Title: CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PUBLIC HEALTH GUIDELINES: THE MAKING OF APPROPRIATE STRONG RECOMMENDATIONS WHEN THE CONFIDENCE IN EFFECT ESTIMATES IS LOW OR VERY LOW (DISCORDANT)
Other Titles: CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PUBLIC HEALTH GUIDELINES
Authors: Alexander, Paul
Advisor: Guyatt, Gordon
Department: Health Research Methodology
Keywords: World Health Organization, clinical practice guidelines, public health guidelines, GRADE, discordant, strong recommendations, low confidence, low quality of evidence
Publication Date: 2015
Abstract: Clinical practice, public health, and policy guidelines should be developed based on a systematic approach that uses the best available evidence. The advent of the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) framework has facilitated this, resulting in a transparent approach to guideline development. GRADE suggests that guideline developers seldom make strong recommendations based on low or very low confidence in effect estimates (strong l/vl). The World Health Organization (WHO) produces recommendations that guide public health policy and, in 2003, WHO adopted the GRADE approach to guideline development. Initial anecdotal evidence suggested that WHO issues a large number of strong recommendations and particularly strong l/vl. Our research team evaluated the nature of WHO recommendations and conducted a qualitative study using interviews of guideline panel members. Key findings included: i) WHO makes a large proportion of recommendations as strong l/vl ii) many strong l/vl are inconsistent with GRADE guidance iii) reasons guideline panel members offered for strong l/vl included skepticism about the value of making conditional recommendations; political considerations; a high confidence in benefits despite formal ratings of low confidence; and long-standing practices, funding, and policy; iv) methodologist interviewees indicated panelists’ lack of commitment to conditional recommendations; a perceived tension between methodologists and panelists due to resistance to adhering to GRADE guidance; both financial and non-financial conflicts of interest among panel members as explanations of strong l/vl; and the need for greater clarity of, and support for, the role of methodologists as co-chairs of panels. The understanding of when and why strong l/vl are formulated at WHO is an important methodological issue that has implications not just for WHO, but for a wide range of guideline developers elsewhere. Our findings offer insights that may guide interventions to enhance trustworthiness of practice guidelines.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/16804
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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FINAL doctoral thesis_P Alexander_revisions March 1_2015.pdf
Open Access
This file is the pdf version which is the entire (MAIN) thesis and all 9 chapters (all published and submitted studies)1.54 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
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