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      Systematically reviewing qualitative and quantitative evidence to inform management and policy-making in the health field

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          Abstract

          Policy-makers and managers have always used a wide range of sources of evidence in making decisions about policy and the organization of services. However, they are under increasing pressure to adopt a more systematic approach to the utilization of the complex evidence base. Decision-makers must address complicated questions about the nature and significance of the problem to be addressed; the nature of proposed interventions; their differential impact; cost-effectiveness; acceptability and so on. This means that Cochrane-style reviews alone are not sufficient. Rather, they require access to syntheses of high-quality evidence that include research and non-research sources, and both qualitative and quantitative research findings.

          There is no single, agreed framework for synthesizing such diverse forms of evidence and many of the approaches potentially applicable to such an endeavour were devised for either qualitative or quantitative synthesis and/or for analysing primary data. This paper describes the key stages in reviewing and synthesizing qualitative and quantitative evidence for decision-making and looks at various strategies that could offer a way forward. We identify four basic approaches: narrative (including traditional ‘literature reviews’ and more methodologically explicit approaches such as ‘thematic analysis’, ‘narrative synthesis’, ‘realist synthesis’ and ‘meta-narrative mapping’), qualitative (which convert all available evidence into qualitative form using techniques such as ‘meta-ethnography’ and ‘qualitative cross-case analysis’), quantitative (which convert all evidence into quantitative form using techniques such as‘quantitative case survey’ or ‘content analysis’) and Bayesian meta-analysis and decision analysis (which can convert qualitative evidence such as preferences about different outcomes into quantitative form or ‘weights’ to use in quantitative synthesis). The choice of approach will be contingent on the aim of the review and nature of the available evidence, and often more than one approach will be required.

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          Applications of case study research

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            Studying the Organization and Delivery of Health Services: Research Methods

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              Naturalistic inquiry.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Health Services Research & Policy
                J Health Serv Res Policy
                SAGE Publications
                1355-8196
                1758-1060
                July 2005
                December 04 2016
                July 2005
                : 10
                : 1_suppl
                : 6-20
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Health Services Research Unit, Department of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London
                [2 ]School of Nursing & Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton
                [3 ]Institute for Health Research, University of Lancaster, Lancaster, UK
                Article
                10.1258/1355819054308576
                16053580
                850f5e8b-3002-4571-8ab0-076eca07fae9
                © 2005

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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