Synthesizing evidence on complex interventions: how meta-analytical, qualitative, and mixed-method approaches can contribute

J Clin Epidemiol. 2013 Nov;66(11):1230-43. doi: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2013.06.005. Epub 2013 Aug 14.

Abstract

Objectives: Although there is increasing interest in the evaluation of complex interventions, there is little guidance on how evidence from complex interventions may be reviewed and synthesized, and the relevance of the plethora of evidence synthesis methods to complexity is unclear. This article aims to explore how different meta-analytical approaches can be used to examine aspects of complexity; describe the contribution of various narrative, tabular, and graphical approaches to synthesis; and give an overview of the potential choice of selected qualitative and mixed-method evidence synthesis approaches.

Study design and setting: The methodological discussions presented here build on a 2-day workshop held in Montebello, Canada, in January 2012, involving methodological experts from the Campbell and Cochrane Collaborations and from other international review centers (Anderson L, Petticrew M, Chandler J, et al.

Introduction: systematic reviews of complex interventions. In press). These systematic review methodologists discussed the broad range of existing methods and considered the relevance of these methods to reviews of complex interventions.

Results: The evidence from primary studies of complex interventions may be qualitative or quantitative. There is a wide range of methodological options for reviewing and presenting this evidence. Specific contributions of statistical approaches include the use of meta-analysis, meta-regression, and Bayesian methods, whereas narrative summary approaches provide valuable precursors or alternatives to these. Qualitative and mixed-method approaches include thematic synthesis, framework synthesis, and realist synthesis. A suitable combination of these approaches allows synthesis of evidence for understanding complex interventions.

Conclusion: Reviewers need to consider which aspects of complex interventions should be a focus of their review and what types of quantitative and/or qualitative studies they will be including, and this will inform their choice of review methods. These may range from standard meta-analysis through to more complex mixed-method synthesis and synthesis approaches that incorporate theory and/or user's perspectives.

Keywords: Complex interventions; Evaluation; Evidence synthesis; Meta-analysis; Mixed methods; Systematic review.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Comment

MeSH terms

  • Data Interpretation, Statistical*
  • Humans
  • Research Design*
  • Review Literature as Topic*