Abstract

BackgroundThere is consensus that health services commissioning and clinical practice should be driven by scientific evidence. However, workload pressures, accessibility of peer reviewed publications and skills to find, appraise, and synthesise relevant evidence are often cited as barriers to uptake of research evidence by practitioners and commissioners alike. In recent years a growing requirement for rapid evidence synthesis to inform commissioning decisions about healthcare service delivery and provision of care contributed to an increasing popularity of scoping literature reviews (SLRs). Yet, comprehensive guidelines for conducting and reporting SLRs are still relatively scarce.MethodsThe exemplar review used as a worked example aimed to provide a readily available, comprehensive, and user-friendly repository of research evidence for local commissioners to help them make evidence-informed decisions about redesigning East of England Children and Adolescent Mental Health Services. In conducting the review, we were broadly guided by Arksey and O’Malley’s framework, however some modifications were made at different stages to better reflect the largely pragmatic objective of this review. This paper compares the methodology used with existing methodological frameworks for scoping studies, to add to the existing knowledge base.ResultsWe proposed the following advancements to the existing SLR frameworks: (i) Assemble a research team with complementary skills and expertise; (ii); Draw on expertise of external partners, particularly practitioners, decision-makers and commissioners who will be translating findings into practice; (iii) Pre-register the review protocol. Keep a detailed record of all steps and decisions and consider how they would impact on generalisability and utility of review findings; (iv) Use systematic procedures for literature searchers, selection of studies, data extraction and analysis; (v) If feasible, appraise the quality of included evidence; (vi) Be transparent about limitations of findings.ConclusionsDespite some methodological limitations, scoping literature reviews are a useful method of rapidly synthesising a large body of evidence to inform commissioning and transformation of CAMHS. SLRs allow researchers to start with a broader questions, to explore the issue from different perspectives and perhaps find more comprehensive solutions that are not only effective, but also accounted for their feasibility and acceptability to key stakeholders.

Highlights

  • There is consensus that health services commissioning and clinical practice should be driven by scientific evidence

  • Scoping literature review (SLR) stage 1: defining research questions, coverage and breadth, and inclusion/exclusion criteria Defining aims and research questions Aims and research questions were formulated to reflect the pragmatic aim of the SLR i.e. guiding the operationalisation of key priorities for local Children and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) transformation

  • These objectives led to the following, broad research questions: 1. What are the effective ways of delivering services that were prioritised for CAMHS transformation?

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Summary

Introduction

There is consensus that health services commissioning and clinical practice should be driven by scientific evidence. Workload pressures, accessibility of peer reviewed publications and skills to find, appraise, and synthesise relevant evidence are often cited as barriers to uptake of research evidence by practitioners and commissioners alike. In recent years a growing requirement for rapid evidence synthesis to inform commissioning decisions about healthcare service delivery and provision of care contributed to an increasing popularity of scoping literature reviews (SLRs). There is consensus that health services commissioning and clinical practice should be driven by scientific evidence, but decision-makers often feel that gathering evidence may slow down innovation and overwhelm frontline staff [1]. Workload pressures and accessibility of peer reviewed publications are often cited as barriers to uptake of research evidence by commissioners [1, 2]. It is crucial that evidence guiding services and care provision comes from reliable sources, is critically appraised, and interpreted in the light of the overall body of available evidence [6]

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