心理健康中的理性决策:系统评价的作用

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Simon M Gilbody, Mark Petticrew
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引用次数: 25

摘要

背景:“系统综述”已被公认为以透明和可重复的方式总结令人困惑且往往相互矛盾的初级研究的最严格方法。他们最大的影响是对流行病学文献的总结,尤其是与临床有效性有关的文献。系统审查也有可能为医疗政策的理性决策提供信息,并成为经济评估的一个组成部分。研究目的:本文旨在介绍系统综述背后的基本原理,并利用心理健康的例子,介绍系统综述的优势和局限性,特别是在为心理健康政策和经济评估提供信息方面。方法:从最近围绕引入新的精神病药物(抗抑郁药和抗精神分裂症药物)和在社区提供精神病护理的方法(病例管理和果断的社区治疗)的争议中选择例子。讨论了系统审查的潜力,以(i)产生临床疗效和有效性的最佳估计,(ii)帮助经济评估和政策决策,以及(iii)突出初级研究知识库中的差距。最后,从外部心理健康中选择了一些例子,以表明系统审查如何有潜力明确用于经济和卫生政策评估。结果:系统评价产生了对临床疗效的最佳估计,这可以成为经济评价的重要组成部分。重要的是,主要研究文献中的严重方法论缺陷和不确定性领域是在明确的框架内确定的。可以产生临床有效性的汇总指数,但很难通过汇集初级研究的经济数据来产生这种成本效益的汇总指数。建模通常用于经济和政策评估。在这里,系统审查可以提供对有效性的最佳估计,重要的是,可以突出可用于“敏感性分析”的不确定性领域。讨论:系统综述是最近方法学的一个重要进展,其潜力在心理健康方面才刚刚开始实现。这种系统综述的使用可能在产生临床有效性数据的关键摘要方面是最先进的。当主要研究文献质量较差时,系统综述无法得出有效可信的结论。系统综述的一个重要功能是突出这项质量较差的研究,这项研究在心理健康决策中几乎没有用处。对医疗服务的影响:医疗服务应具有临床和成本效益。系统审查是确保实现这一目标的关键组成部分。对卫生政策的影响:系统审查有可能为卫生政策提供信息。所举的例子表明,制定卫生政策往往没有适当考虑研究证据。系统的审查可以提供有力和可信的答案,有助于为理性决策提供信息。重要的是,系统的审查可以突出重要的初级研究的必要性,并可以为这项研究的设计提供信息,从而提供有助于制定医疗保健政策的答案。对进一步研究的启示:系统的审查应该先于昂贵的(通常是不必要的)初级研究。卫生政策和实践的许多领域尚未使用系统的审查方法进行评估。经济数据汇总的方法在方法论上很复杂,值得进一步研究。版权所有©1999 John Wiley&;有限公司。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rational decision-making in mental health: the role of systematic reviews

Background: ‘Systematic reviews’ have come to be recognized as the most rigorous method of summarizing confusing and often contradictory primary research in a transparent and reproducible manner. Their greatest impact has been in the summarization of epidemiological literature—particularly that relating to clinical effectiveness. Systematic reviews also have a potential to inform rational decision-making in healthcare policy and to form a component of economic evaluation. Aims of the study: This article aims to introduce the rationale behind systematic reviews and, using examples from mental health, to introduce the strengths and limitations of systematic reviews, particularly in informing mental health policy and economic evaluation. Methods: Examples are selected from recent controversies surrounding the introduction of new psychiatric drugs (anti-depressants and anti-schizophrenia drugs) and methods of delivering psychiatric care in the community (case management and assertive community treatment). The potential for systematic reviews to (i) produce best estimates of clinical efficacy and effectiveness, (ii) aid economic evaluation and policy decision-making and (iii) highlight gaps in the primary research knowledge base are discussed. Lastly examples are selected from outside mental health to show how systematic reviews have a potential to be explicitly used in economic and health policy evaluation. Results: Systematic reviews produce the best estimates of clinical efficacy, which can form an important component of economic evaluation. Importantly, serious methodological flaws and areas of uncertainty in the primary research literature are identified within an explicit framework. Summary indices of clinical effectiveness can be produced, but it is difficult to produce such summary indices of cost effectiveness by pooling economic data from primary studies. Modelling is commonly used in economic and policy evaluation. Here, systematic reviews can provide the best estimates of effectiveness and, importantly, highlight areas of uncertainty that can be used in ‘sensitivity analysis’. Discussion: Systematic reviews are an important recent methodological advance, the potential for which has only begun to be realized in mental health. This use of systematic reviews is probably most advanced in producing critical summaries of clinical effectiveness data. Systematic reviews cannot produce valid and believable conclusions when the primary research literature is of poor quality. An important function of systematic reviews will be in highlighting this poor quality research which is of little use in mental health decision making. Implications for health provision: Health care provision should be both clinically and cost effective. Systematic reviews are a key component in ensuring that this goal is achieved. Implications for health policies: Systematic reviews have potential to inform health policy. Examples presented show that health policy is often made without due consideration of the research evidence. Systematic reviews can provide robust and believable answers, which can help inform rational decision-making. Importantly, systematic reviews can highlight the need for important primary research and can inform the design of this research such that it provides answers that will help in forming healthcare policy. Implications for further research: Systematic reviews should precede costly (and often unnecessary) primary research. Many areas of health policy and practice have yet to be evaluated using systematic review methodology. Methods for the summarization of economic data are methodologically complex and deserve further research. Copyright © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics publishes high quality empirical, analytical and methodologic papers focusing on the application of health and economic research and policy analysis in mental health. It offers an international forum to enable the different participants in mental health policy and economics - psychiatrists involved in research and care and other mental health workers, health services researchers, health economists, policy makers, public and private health providers, advocacy groups, and the pharmaceutical industry - to share common information in a common language.
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