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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/25540
Title: RAPID RECOMMENDATIONS: IMPROVING THE EFFICIENCY AND TRUSTWORTHINESS OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS AND GUIDELINES
Other Titles: RAPID RECOMMENDATIONS
Authors: Siemieniuk, Reed Alexander Cunningham
Advisor: Guyatt, Gordon H.
Department: Health Research Methodology
Keywords: Clinical practice guidelines;Research methods;Rapid reviews;Rapid guidelines
Publication Date: 2020
Abstract: Healthcare workers rely on clinical practice guidelines to inform their practice. However, most guidelines are not trustworthy when judged by accepted standards and they typically take several years to produce. Guideline trustworthiness is undermined by panel members who often have conflicts of interest, by including representation from only a subset of stakeholders, by failing to examine the entirety of the evidence systematically, and by rapid obsolescence. Further, they are often difficult for users to understand in limited time. Rather than updating guidance on a fixed schedule, the Rapid Recommendations approach involves continuous monitoring of the literature and produces guidelines in response to new potentially practice-changing evidence. A collaborative network of clinicians, methodologists, and patients respond by rapidly producing trustworthy evidence syntheses and guidance. We have identified efficiencies at every step of the guideline development process. The guideline panel does not include anyone with a financial conflict of interest and there are strict limits professional and intellectual conflicts. Systematic reviews are produced on the relative effects of each option, on prognosis, and on patient values and preferences with the explicit intent to inform the question at hand. The panel also considers practical issues. Rapid Recommendations are published in a concise multilayered user-friendly format headed by an interactive infographic that contains all of the necessary information for users need to make informed decisions at the point of care. The guideline is published simultaneously in print and electronically, including decision aids that can be used at the point of care and integrated into electronic medical records. In this thesis, you will find a selection of exemplary publications relevant to the Rapid Recommendations process. We show that a responsive approach to rapid and trustworthy guideline creation is possible. It represents a way forward from the current limitations that plague most current clinical practice guidelines.
Description: This thesis explores the Rapid Recommendations process, a new responsive way of creating clinical practice guidelines.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/25540
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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