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Cochrane in 140 characters

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Cochrane in 140 charactersmumoquit@cochr…Wed, 03/09/2016 - 19:48
Cochrane in 140 characters

 New evidence published in the BMJ this month suggests that tweeting out links to Cochrane Reviews increases ‘product placement’ of evidence, which has the potential to then influence care. Members of the Cochrane Schizophrenia Group conducted a randomized control trial to see if sharing the review on Weibo and Twitter effects Review visits to the Cochrane Summary page, as well as secondary outcomes such as time spent on page. They found that there was more time spent on the target site and the time spent on the page was longer. They didn’t find that China (where they use Weibo) was any more or less effective compared with the rest of the world.

While there is more research to be done, it’s a great reminder to Cochrane Groups about the power of disseminating your evidence through social media. Here are some resources to assist you:


Project Transform awarded Partnership Project grant

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Project Transform awarded Partnership Project grant mumoquit@cochr…Fri, 03/11/2016 - 18:13
 Project Transform awarded Partnership Project grant

Cochrane's Project Transform team was recently awarded a Partnership Project grant (2016-2018) of AU$930,416 from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.

"This three-year grant is very welcome," says project lead Julian Elliott. "This funding will help us find the best way to bring together automation, crowdsourcing and Cochrane's global network of contributors to transform the way evidence is produced. We'll expand our current research and evaluation activities, particularly across our automation and crowdsourcing initiatives, and set up demonstration projects with the Australian guideline development community. Ultimately the grant will help us move more rapidly towards effective and efficient evidence and guideline production."

Questions about Project Transform can be directed to transform@cochrane.org

Community website: next steps

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Community website: next stepsnowens@cochrane.orgTue, 03/15/2016 - 07:48
Community website: next steps

Dear Cochrane colleagues,
I hope by now you will have had a chance to look around the re-designed Community website, following our soft launch at the end of February. As we are still actively developing the site and integrating and creating content, I’d like to update you on plans for the next stage of work.

Responding to feedback
We’ve had lots of feedback over the last couple of weeks to let us know about bugs, fixes, requests for editing, missing information, and general comments. Thank you for all of it, and please continue to flag up anything you think we need to know about. We’re prioritizing responding to these, and most of them are relatively simple to fix or implement; we’ll let you know if any suggestion requires further review or discussion before it can be done.

Next stage of work
Now that post-launch feedback is slowing down, we’re planning out focused projects of work for the remainder of March and through the month of April. We’re running these projects as weeklong ‘sprints’, focusing on tasks such as moving manuals, developing portals, and integrating or creating content in specific sections of the site. We’ll be contacting key people individually in preparation for starting work on these sprints, but please feel free to get in touch if you’ve got questions about this process.

Editing access
In addition to the new look and feel of the Community site, it’s also operating on a new system – Drupal 8 – that we’re still learning how to use and build as we go. So we’re taking it slowly in opening up editing access until we’re confident that everything is stable. As we work through the sprints, we’ll start piloting editing access to key users a few at a time and then make decisions about more general access. In the meantime, we’ll continue to prioritize requests to edit and update pages to make sure they’re up to date.

Thanks again for your interest and input, and please let me know if there’s any aspect of this you’d like to discuss further.

Best
Nancy Owens, Senior Communications Manager, Communications and External Affairs

Cochrane has a new partnership policy

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Cochrane has a new partnership policymumoquit@cochr…Wed, 03/16/2016 - 15:15
Cochrane has a new partnership policy

The Cochrane Steering Group, in its January 2016 Vancouver meeting, approved a revision of Cochrane’s partnership policy. It also supported the proposed partnership framework. This framework is a useful tool for all Cochrane Groups when developing or evaluating their partnerships.

In 2016, more tools will be developed to support Cochrane Groups in partnership development. We expect these resources will be useful in making partnerships beneficial to Cochrane as well as to our external partners.

For suggestions and comments regarding external partnerships, please contact:

Sylvia de Haan, Partnerships Co-ordinator, Communications and External Affairs

Clinical research is wasted when systematic reviews fail to provide a complete and up-to-date evidence synthesis: Cochrane team proposes a new approach

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Clinical research is wasted when systematic reviews fail to provide a complete and up-to-date evidence synthesis: Cochrane team proposes a new approachnowens@cochrane.orgTue, 03/22/2016 - 01:15
Clinical research is wasted when systematic reviews fail to provide a complete and up-to-date evidence synthesis: Cochrane team proposes a new approach

An innovative analysis from a team of Cochrane France researchers suggests that systematic reviews of multiple treatments provide a fragmented, out-of-date panorama of the available evidence. These findings question the current approach to synthesizing evidence and suggest that it does not fully address the needs of patients and clinicians.

The article, recently published in BMC Medicine, is co-authored by Perrine Créquit, Ludovic Trinquart, Amélie Yavchitz, and Philippe Ravaud, from Cochrane France and INSERM U1153 METHODS team, Paris, France.

Multiple treatments are now frequently available for the same disease. Patients and physicians need a comprehensive, up-to-date synthesis of evidence for all competing treatments to know which treatments work best. The author team took a specific example - second-line treatments of advanced non-small cell lung cancer and attempted to assess whether such a complete and up-to-date evidence synthesis was available over time.

To carry out this assessment, the authors performed a series of systematic overviews and networks of randomized trials to assess the gap between evidence covered by systematic reviews and available trials. They also propose a new approach to evidence synthesis, called “live cumulative network meta-analysis”, which outlines how to switch from a series of systematic reviews — performed at different points in time, frequently out-of-date, and focusing on specific treatments (many treatments being not considered) – to a single systematic review covering all treatments, with network meta-analyses, and updated continuously to incorporate the results of new trials when they become available.

Speaking to students about Cochrane

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Speaking to students about Cochrane mumoquit@cochr…Wed, 03/30/2016 - 17:03
Speaking to students about Cochrane

Reposted, with permission, from Cochrane CanadaCochrane Canada’s Knowledge Broker, Eileen Vilis, shares more about her recent presentation to students and offers tips to other Cochrane groups. 

Cochrane Canada was again invited to speak to the dental hygiene students and staff at the Canadian National Institute of Health in Ottawa about Cochrane and its many resources. When the students were polled at the beginning of the session, most of the thirty-three dental hygiene students had not heard about or used Cochrane Reviews or resources. Although they would learn about Cochrane Reviews later in their research course, their clinical coordinator believed hearing about Cochrane resources from a Cochrane Canada staff member was an excellent opportunity to understand how research could be used in dental hygiene practice.

The students were given the chance to learn about Cochrane, its resources, and how they could use this high-quality healthcare evidence. Included in the presentation were: what Cochrane is, why systematic reviews are important, and the types of questions Cochrane Reviews answer. A variety of Cochrane Review examples specific to dental health care were used throughout, demonstrating where to find and how to use Cochrane Reviews.

By the end of the session, another poll of the students indicated that they now understood the variety of resources Cochrane offered and which resources they would use most frequently.

Given our experience, here are some top tips to help your Cochrane group speak to students:
 

1.   Guest speakers are welcome: professors/instructors are often happy to have a guest speaker present, and students enjoy the experience too. Speak to relevant professors/instructors or department heads about the possibility.

2.     Give some background: you may be the first exposure to Cochrane evidence for the students. It’s good to give some background on what Cochrane is and why we do what we do; a slide on the components of evidence-based practice (research information, clinical experience and patient values, preferences and needs); why evidence may not be used by practitioners and consumers; what systematic reviews are, why they are important, and what types of questions are answered by Cochrane Reviews.

3.   Use relevant and/or interesting examples: providing examples based on a relevant study area or health questions encountered by most people in daily life increases the chances of the information sticking - such as  “Stretching to prevent or reduce muscle soreness after exercise”, “Vitamin C for colds”. Use at least one Cochrane Review with a positive outcome such as “Powered versus manual toothbrushing”, “Pilates for low back pain”, “Acupuncture for tension-type headaches”.

4.  Take your audience on a tour of where to find and how to use available Cochrane resources: the Cochrane website (including latest Cochrane evidence, Top 10, Our evidence, How to search, and Podcasts) and the Cochrane Library (learn about, sign up for, and search; Special Collections and Cochrane Journal Club). Other local websites and resources can be featured, such as related Centre or Review Group websites, training and events, and Cochrane external newsletter.

5.  Measure your success: we conducted a short survey at the start and end of our session to see how well we met our goals, which resources the audience were most likely to use, and collect feedback for improvement.

Remember that the students you speak to have the potential to improve so many lives with using Cochrane evidence in their future practice….or could become future Cochrane authors!

Eileen Vilis
Knowledge Broker

Cochrane Canada

Cochrane Steering Group agenda and open access papers available

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Cochrane Steering Group agenda and open access papers availablenowens@cochrane.orgFri, 04/01/2016 - 12:26
Cochrane Steering Group agenda and open access papers available

The agenda and open access papers for the Cochrane Steering Group (CSG) meeting to be held in London on the 7th and 8th April 2016 are now available to view online, for information only.

The Steering Group is the elected Board of Trustees for The Cochrane Collaboration. If you would like to comment on an item then you should contact your Steering Group representative. Contact details for CSG members are available on the CSG page.

 

Seoul Colloquium news

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Seoul Colloquium newsnowens@cochrane.orgFri, 04/08/2016 - 11:03
Early bird registration opens and submission deadline extended

We are pleased to announce that early bird registration is now open for the 2016 Cochrane Colloquium – please see the registration information page for guidelines, key dates, and more.

Submission remains open for abstracts and workshops, and is now open until Wednesday, 20 April – please see the Call for abstracts and Call for workshops pages for more information.

For complete information, please see the Colloquium website.

Look forward to seeing you in Seoul in October!

 


Swiss students share their experience at Cochrane's Colloquium

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Swiss students share their experience at Cochrane's Colloquiummumoquit@cochr…Tue, 04/12/2016 - 19:33
Swiss students share their experience at Cochrane's Colloquium

Alain Amstutz, Elina Christes, Jérémy Glasner, Alen Hascic, and  Patrick Schmitt attended the last  Cochrane Colloquium. They shared information about Cochrane and their experience in the National Journal of Swiss Medical Students recently. This journal is distributed in all six medical faculties of Switzerland at the beginning of the semester. Below is an excerpt of their report.

Cochrane’s 23rd Colloquium took place at the beginning of October 2015 in Vienna, Austria with the theme ‘Filtering the Information Overload for Better Decisions'. During five days filled with conferences, workshops, and poster fairs, the problem described in the theme was discussed and processed, looking for solutions and approaches how to tackle this important difficulty.

Newcomers Session
Enjoying the 'Cochrane Newcomer' session, where there was 'speed dating' to network and tips on how to make the most of the Colloquium.

Alen Hascic, recalling his experience, said, “At the Colloquium one could feel that one is part of something big. Not only because there were over 1,300 participants from all over the world, but mostly because every individual wanted to add their part to aid numerous decisions based on scientific research, that will be taken daily by medical personnel.”

 

The Swiss delegation at the Gala Dinner
Swiss medical students at the Gala Dinner

UAEM @ Cochrane Colloquium

Universities Allied for Essential Medicines (UAEM) is a Swiss Medical Students' Association (SMSA) associated project and had a unique role throughout the Cochrane Colloquium. Beginning at the European Conference of UAEM 2014 in Basel, there has been a growing collaboration between the two organizations. Cochrane strongly supports and works in the field of Access to Data, since only complete publication of all results can truly produce an adequate meta-analysis (see publication bias). Cochrane joined forces with UAEM, which also fights for Access to Medicine and greater transparency in the industry, especially concerning the prices of pharmaceuticals. Cochrane supported UAEM's organization of a panel discussion and workshop as part of the Colloquium agenda. The discussion evaluated the problems we currently face in the development of pharmaceuticals, presented solutions to these problems, and underlined the responsibilities of universities and researchers with regard to these issues. The expert side of the discussion included famous names such as Katy Athersuch (MSF Access Campaign), Tim Hubbard (Human Genome Project), and Ellen ‘t Hoen (health activist)m while UAEM was represented by Thomas Deimel from UAEM Vienna. A recording of the discussion is available on UAEM Switzerland's Facebook page.

“For me it was beautiful to see how open and interested the researches, panellists, and Cochraners were towards us students and how they took our projects seriously. The conference has surely solidified my knowledge and understanding of evidence-based medicine, and has inspired a new interest in systematic reviews,” said Elina Christes, a Swiss medical student.

Additionally, the UAEM project Report Card was presented at a workshop, along with an open discussion for further input and suggestions. The Report Card is a document designed to enable universities to measure their efforts and contributions toward improved global health. More information is available at www.globalhealthgrades.org. Hascic  concluded, “Both UAEM events were well attended and enjoyed by participants. We hope that we can count on the support of the Cochrane researches and are looking forward to the possibilities that these relationships could present to us!”

Registration for the 24th Cochrane Colloquium is open – with reduced fees for full-time students! It will take place in Seoul Korea, 23-27 October.

Preventing overdiagnosis - from Barcelona to Seoul

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Preventing overdiagnosis - from Barcelona to Seoul nowens@cochrane.orgThu, 04/14/2016 - 06:22
Preventing overdiagnosis - from Barcelona to Seoul

Dr Ray Moynihan is Senior Research Fellow at Bond University and co-chair of the scientific committee for the international Preventing Overdiagnosis conference taking place in Barcelona in September 2016. In this blog post he invites you to Barcelona, and explores the growing interest within Cochrane in tackling the problem of too much medicine – being addressed in an increasing number of initiatives worldwide.

Blog author Ray MoynihanJust a month before Cochrane’s annual meeting in Seoul, the fourth Preventing Overdiagnosis meeting will happen in downtown Barcelona, 20-22 September – the first time in the Spanish-speaking world.  For those who haven’t been to any of the first three meetings, it’s well worth a look.

Like many Cochrane gatherings, the international Preventing Overdiagnosis conference is full of independent-minded and rigorous scientists, clinicians, consumers, and policy-folk from across multiple disciplines and as many nations.  For anyone who currently doesn’t have overdiagnosis and overtreatment on their radar, it might be time you did.

But even if you miss the Barcelona conference, there’ll be a big dose of overdiagnosis at the Cochrane Colloquium in Souel in October. This year’s opening plenary is focused solely on overdiagnosis. Australian Professor Alex Barratt will offer an overview of the magnitude of the problem, and Professor Jenny Doust is billed to talk about using evidence to combat it.

And the person giving the annual Cochrane lecture, Professor Paul Glasziou, will likely find it hard not to mention the threat to human health from overdiagnosis as he looks to the future of evidence-informed health care. The high profile of this problem of too much medicine in Seoul is not so surprising – co-chair of the Seoul Colloquium is Dr Hyeong Sik Ahn, who happens to be not only the Director of Cochrane Korea, but also another member of the scientific committee for the Preventing Overdiagnosis conference.

Many initiatives around the world are starting to address the problem of too much medicine. JAMA Internal Medicine is running Less is More, the BMJ is running the Too Much Medicine campaign, and the Lown Institute has launched Right Care. The Quaternary prevention movement is growing, Choosing Wisely is happening in more than a dozen countries; the Royal College of General Practitioners now has an overdiagnosis working group, as does the Guidelines International Network.  

Given the feelings among many within the Cochrane community, it seems inevitable that the collaboration will likewise soon formalize its response to the problem of too much medicine. Somehow a sensitivity to the need to reduce medical excess will be built into the collaboration’s very infrastructure.  As one of the most respected, ,and independent players in healthcare, Cochrane is ideally placed to help address this mess.

As John Ioannidis and others have pointed out, too much of the “evidence” being synthesized in systematic views is corrupted by sponsorship from companies seeking to maximize markets – which we know tends to produce more favourable outcomes than independent research. The fact of that sponsorship needs to be given a much higher profile in Cochrane Reviews – ideally in the abstract.  Risk of bias tools should start to take sponsorship into account and it’s surely well past time to start discounting for the effects of commercial trial funding, particularly when the magnitude of benefits are small, and the uncertainty around them large. Cartoon

Assessments of diagnostic technologies – and systematic reviews of those assessments – need to be more sensitive to whether new tests are picking up “abnormalities” which would be better left unknown.

And ideally Cochrane Reviews can start throwing more critical scrutiny onto the disease definitions that turn more and more people into patients, as well as the interventions that are used to test and treat them.

In short there’s going to be a lot more talk this year about Preventing Overdiagnosis from Spain to South Korea.


Abstracts submission for Preventing Overdiagnosis conference closes as of 15 April; early bird registration fees are still available. More at www.preventingoverdiagnosis.net

The Iberoamerican Cochrane Centre organises a Conference on Clinical Appropriateness, 21-22 April

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The Iberoamerican Cochrane Centre organises a Conference on Clinical Appropriateness, 21-22 Aprilmumoquit@cochr…Thu, 04/14/2016 - 15:44
The Iberoamerican Cochrane Centre organises a Conference on Clinical Appropriateness, 21-22 April

The Iberoamerican Cochrane Centre and the Clinical Epidemiology Service of the Hospital of Sant Pau will hold a conference of CIBERESP (CIBER de Epidemiología y Salud Pública; Biomedical Research Networking Centres of Epidemiology and Public Health) on 21-22 April  2016. The focus of the conference will be on 'Research to Improve Appropriateness of Clinical and Care Practice'. This conference will be held within the scope of the CIBERESP and are open to all attendees.

Conference

The event will take place in the impressive Art Nouveau site of the Hospital of Sant Pau in Barcelona, Spain. The conference will include different talks, communications, and workshops. The attendance to the sessions will be free but you are kindly requested to register beforehand.

Check the programme in Spanish here. For more information please contact: comunica@cochrane.es.

Cochrane Steering Group announces decisions from April meetings

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Cochrane Steering Group announces decisions from April meetingsnowens@cochrane.orgThu, 04/14/2016 - 21:36
Cochrane Steering Group

Please find below the main decisions by the Cochrane Steering Group (CSG) from the London meeting. If you have any questions about these decisions, please contact your Steering Group Representative. The full minutes will be available soon.

Cochrane Canada
Decision: The CSG expressed continued support for Cochrane Canada and appreciation for the extensive efforts of many contributors working to Save Cochrane Canada. Full details of this decision and plan will be available shortly.

Governance reform
Decision: Following initial consultation and a Strategic Session at the Mid-Year Meetings in London, the CSG agreed to proceed with the proposed reforms to Cochrane’s governance structures. The CSG discussed the feedback received on the proposals and is committed to ensuring a meaningful voice for Groups in Cochrane’s governance, and support for participation by contributors. The next steps will be to draft specific amendments to Cochrane’s Articles of Association, and a more detailed framework for the propose Council for consultation with all contributors. A final decision about the reforms will be made at the Seoul Colloquium in October 2016.

Review of structure and function
Decision: The CSG considered a proposal for changes to the way Cochrane operates arising from the recent review of structure and function. The key changes will be the introduction of centralized editorial processing and the consolidation of Cochrane Groups into geographic and topic-based networks. Cochrane Groups will be integral in the next steps of this work, with further details to follow.

Approved papers

Past and future meetings
The minutes of the CSG meeting in Vancouver in January 2016 have been approved and are now available.
 

CSG

Lisa Bero and Cindy Farquhar
Co-Chairs, Cochrane Steering Group

14 April, 2016

Blogshots – making evidence short and shareable for social media

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Blogshots – making evidence short and shareable for social mediamumoquit@cochr…Fri, 04/15/2016 - 17:20
Blogshots

Sarah Chapman is a knowledge broker at Cochrane UK. She writes and edits their weekly blog, Evidently Cochrane, and helps to shares Cochrane evidence across social media platforms.

It’s nine months since we started experimenting with blogshots as a way to share evidence. You can read more about how we developed them in this blog post: http://www.evidentlycochrane.net/blogshots-evidence-at-a-glance/

These images with brief information, shared though social media, are proving to be really popular. I’m noticing more pictures in my Twitter feed and blogshots fit with this increased appetite for images. They also provide useful information fast. People share them, comment on them and many click the accompanying link to the review (or blog, or other resource). Our most popular so far have been the blogshots accompanying the portion size review, which quickly generated more than 1000 clicks to the review.

Portion size

It’s fantastic that others in Cochrane are translating our blogshots or looking to make their own and now seems like a good time to bring you up to date with how we’re making and using blogshots and to offer a few tips, in the hope that this will encourage you to blogshot (new verb!) your reviews!

What to put into a blogshot?

  • Image: choose something clear and simple, which will allow the title to show up (if you’re putting your title on top). Please contact Muriah Umoquit in the Communications and External Affairs department. She can help get you an appropriate images at no cost to your group.
  • Title: Short and simple.
  • Key message: share one or more pieces of information from the review. In line with work done by Clare Glenton and colleagues, I use the qualifiers ‘probably’ and ‘may’ for moderate and low GRADE ratings, and ‘unknown’/’uncertain’ for very low quality evidence. (More about GRADE in a moment).
  • Information about the review: I always say it’s a Cochrane review (you could add ‘New’ or ‘Updated’) and give the number of studies and participants. For blogshots aimed at a lay audience (our Evidence for Everyday Health Choices series), I use ‘studies’ rather than specifying the study design, as the latter is meaningless to many and doesn’t tell people much. I may give some brief information about population/intervention/comparator/outcomes.
  • Quality of evidence/GRADE? We recently reviewed our decision to use only reviews with GRADE for blogshots, knowing that this means we are missing out on sharing evidence from many reviews in this popular format. We have decided to stick with this, as GRADE helps me to prepare an accurate evidence summary, in a short time, using consistent phrasing (as outlined above). However, we have left out any explicit reference to GRADE or evidence quality in the Everyday Health Choices blogshots and will now extend this to all our blogshots. The majority of readers will not be familiar with GRADE and we feel it is more helpful to use it only to inform our key messages.
  • The all-important link: It is vital to share a link to the review, or other related material, in the tweet or other post along with the blogshot. We make a bit.ly link for each blogshot, which allows us to see how many clicks it’s generated, a simple measure of the success of the blogshot.  We had been giving this within the image too (the ‘find out more’ bit), but have decided to abandon this as it’s not clickable and just clutters the space. However, we will put it at the bottom, along with the hashtags, to help us keep track of which link belongs to the blogshot.

 

One review, more than one blogshot?

This is definitely worth considering, where there are multiple key messages to share (we made four for the portion size review, each with the same link but a different message) or where you wish to target more than one audience.

We make blogshots in our general template but also for each of our ‘Evidence for Everyday’ series, for nurses, midwives, patients and (from this June) Allied Health Professionals.  You could consider dual blogshots for health professionals and patients, perhaps, and distinguish between them using a different coloured title, as well as tailoring the language and detail for each target audience. Here are some examples to show you how you can change of the look of the template:

 

everydayPVCmidwife

Where to share?

We share our blogshots on Twitter and Facebook; Pinterest, where we have created boards for each series, and our Cochrane UK website, where they are archived by category and available for anyone to download. We have also just started to post them on the image-sharing social media channel Instagram, using an adapted square template.

Each social media channel has its own advantages and audiences. Instagram tends to be used to 'humanise' a brand, showing that there are people working behind the company logo. It is also increasingly it is being used for information dissemination and campaigning. The WHO use it to deliver information cards with campaigning hashtags. We are doing something similar. 

We will post the square blogshots along with photos of events to increase our brand reach across social media and target a new audience away from twitter and facebook. 

 

Tempted to make your own?

We are very happy for you to suggest reviews you think would make good blogshots, but making them yourself is easy and something you might want to consider.

Blogshot templates in each Cochrane Community colour are available for you to download here. Once you have the template you just need to plug in your logo, picture, and text.

The template is a starting point, but some of the decisions you make about what to share may differ from ours. We are learning as we go and expect to make changes according to what we learn along the way.

We’re looking forward to seeing how our Cochrane colleagues adopt and adapt this popular format!

Sarah Chapman

Knowledge Broker, Cochrane UK

Cochrane and conflict of interest

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Cochrane and conflict of interestnowens@cochrane.orgMon, 04/18/2016 - 11:50
Cochrane and conflict of interest

David Tovey is the Editor in Chief of the Cochrane Library, and has been working with the Cochrane Editorial Unit (CEU) and the wider Cochrane collaboration in this role since 2009. In this post, he discusses Cochrane's conflict of interest policy and recent calls for re-assessment of its application in the conduct of Cochrane Reviews.

David ToveyI didn’t know Bill Silverman, so I can’t judge whether he would be “a-mouldering in his grave”. However, I recognise that James Coyne has set down a challenge to Cochrane to explain its approach to commercial and academic conflicts of interest and also to respond to criticisms made in relation to the appraisal of the much debated PACE study.

Cochrane is still fairly unusual within the journal world in that it specifies that in some cases declaration of interests is necessary but insufficient, and that there are individuals or groups of researchers who are not permitted to proceed with a given systematic review. This has been true since 2004, when Cochrane’s Steering Group ratified a commercial sponsorship policy that described circumstances where authorship as proposed within a review could not go ahead. At the time, Cochrane also introduced the post of Funding Arbiter, reporting directly to its Steering Group, to ensure that the policy was followed, and to rule on ambiguous or disputed cases. As Professor Lisa Bero says “The Cochrane policy is strict because, first, there are no journals that prohibit publication of systematic reviews funded by a company with a financial interest in the outcome of the review. Second, to my knowledge, there are no journals that require the majority of authors to be without personal conflicts of interest, prohibit the first author from having a conflict of interest, or prohibit company employees with a conflict of interest from being an author. For example, the BMJ conflict of interest policy states, ‘We are not aiming to eradicate such interests; they are almost inevitable’ and authors with conflicts of interest are not prohibited from being authors of BMJ original research, systematic reviews or meta-analysis articles. The BMJ does prohibit authors with COI from being authors of: Editorials and education articles (clinical reviews, practice articles, state of the art reviews, Minerva pictures, and Endgames), but these are different from systematic reviews.”

The commercial sponsorship policy was revised and re-ratified by the Cochrane Steering Group in 2014 following an internal consultation. It is an issue that excites strong views inside our community, as it does elsewhere. Within the 2014 policy it was made explicit that review authors could not be employed by pharmaceutical companies, device manufacturers or individuals that were seeking or holding a patent relevant to the intervention or a comparator product. Furthermore, in all cases, review author teams are required to have a majority of non-conflicted authors and the lead author should also be non-conflicted. The policy is available freely.

The policy does not otherwise exclude individuals on the basis of employment or people who have conducted sponsored trials in the area. These interests should be declared, but they do not discount the individuals in question from being able to join the review team if certain restrictions on participation are met. We recognise the need to update the Cochrane policy in respect of academic conflicts, and this process is in the pipeline – however current policy states that:

“Authors of primary studies should not extract data from their own study or studies. Instead, another author(s) or an editor(s) should extract these data, and check the interpretation against the study report and any available study registration details or protocol.

Also, the relevant authorship of the primary studies should be disclosed in Cochrane's disclosure of potential conflicts of interest form and therefore the Cochrane Review.”

We believe that our editorial processes also safeguard against reviews being unduly influenced by individuals with conflict of interest.

In the case of the CFS review, the currently published review is compliant with our policy given that the authors are employed by the Norwegian Knowledge Centre for Health Services, the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, or Oxford University. All have declared that they do not have any conflicts of interest. James Coyne states that Lillebeth Larun is employed by an insurance company, but I am unclear on what basis this is determined. Undeclared conflicts of interest are a challenge for all journals, but when they are brought to our attention, they need to be verified. In any case, within Cochrane it would be a matter for the Funding Arbiters and Arbitration Panel to determine whether this was a sufficiently direct conflict to disbar her from being first author of any update.

In relation to the handling of the PACE study, Coyne reports both the criticisms made of the decision to judge it as being at low risk of bias in relation to selective reporting of outcomes, and also Larun’s response. We also need to remember that the appraisal of the PACE trial sits alongside that of seven other studies that the authors identified. It is undoubtedly true and fairly common for people to judge risk of bias differently; it is often a subjective judgement on the basis of the known factors of the extent to which an issue (in this case changes made to the conduct of the study or its analysis made post-protocol) may have influenced the outcomes. Systematic reviews should provide a balanced interpretation of the results that takes account of considerations likely to affect our confidence in the findings. Here we can see that the authors have explicitly acknowledged the lack of blinding as a source of performance bias, downgrading the quality of evidence for all the outcomes accordingly. Assessing the quality of evidence by necessity requires due consideration of all relevant sources of bias alongside factors such as the consistency of effect and sample size.

Coyne notes that the current review author team for the IPD review includes the trialists of the studies where individual patient data has been provided. This seems to be common practice in the world of individual patient data systematic reviews, although it is also important that all authors within a review team meet the requirements of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) in relation to authorship. In the case of the current protocol, the roles of the various authors are fully described, including a statement that two authors (Odgaard-Jensen and Brurberg) will “conduct all analyses for the review…independently of trialists providing data”. In the case of the proposed individual patient data review, Professor Paul Glasziou has confirmed to me that the trialists involved in the review fully meet the ICMJE criteria for authorship, and that this is in line with standard practice - acknowledging the important role trialists can play in support of the IPD review to agree common methods and definitions to apply across all trials. 

Another issue raised by Coyne has also been raised with me in personal correspondence: namely the perceived use of Cochrane as a rationale for withholding clinical trials data at the level of individual patients from other individuals and organisations. Cochrane is a strong supporter and founding member of the AllTrials initiative and is committed to clinical trials transparency. Cochrane does not believe that sharing data with its researchers is an appropriate rationale for withholding the data from alternative researchers. Each application must be judged independently on its merits. Cochrane has issued a public statement that details our position on access to trial data.

In a later post, Coyne uses John Ioannadis to underline his concerns about Cochrane following a much quoted interview with Retraction Watch. Ioannadis gave a presentation with very similar conclusions to a Cochrane Colloquium plenary in Vienna in 2015. He has also been reported elsewhere as suggesting that he was in danger of ruining the party, but as a witness I can say with confidence that this was far from the case. His presentation was warmly and respectfully received, as befits arguably the world’s foremost researcher in this area, by a community that already spends a substantial part of its time worrying about bias, and thinking about how to minimise it. Ioannadis may be correct that the primary purpose of evidence synthesis is to demonstrate the flaws in the available primary research. He may also be correct that in the future systematic reviews “should become primary research, where studies are designed with the explicit anticipation that they are part of an overarching planned cumulative meta-analysis.” However, in the meantime I believe that Cochrane Reviews characteristically present a more skeptical and balanced view of the evidence than is presented elsewhere, whether in primary or secondary research – something for which we receive much criticism from all the predictable quarters. I am confident that our reviews represent one of the most effective challenges to the optimism bias on view elsewhere in the literature, and in the minds of many practicing clinicians, but we will of course reflect on Ioannadis’ comments when considering future methods policy.


In summary, Cochrane recognises the importance of conflict of interest as a potential source of bias in its reviews. Since 2004, it has determined those circumstances where declaration of conflicts is insufficient, and either an individual or team should be disbarred from conducting a Cochrane Review. The implementation of this policy is complex and there are many areas where the decision on whether the review can proceed requires a thorough investigation. In relation to the CFS reviews, we are extremely aware of the heightened scrutiny that the IPD review will attract. We will therefore ensure that the author team is fully compliant with our conflict of interest policies, and ICMJE guidance on authorship, and that our editorial and peer review processes lead to the publication of a review that is robust and credible.

Cochrane is not complacent. We recognise that both we and the world we inhabit are imperfect and that there is a heavy responsibility on us to ensure that our reviews are credible if they are to be used to guide decision making. This means that we need to continue to be responsive and and open to criticism, just as the instigators of the Bill Silverman prize intended, in order “to acknowledge explicitly the value of criticism of The Cochrane Collaboration, with a view to helping to improve its work.”

David Tovey (dtovey@cochrane.org, @DavidTovey)
18 April 2016

Join us for a Cochrane Twitter chat

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Join us for a Cochrane Twitter chatnowens@cochrane.orgTue, 04/19/2016 - 12:29
Join us for a Cochrane Twitter chat

Join us on Twitter for a chat with #cochraneauthor Liz Wager to discuss new Cochrane Review on Interventions to prevent misconduct and promote integrity in research and publication.

Date: Wednesday 20 April 2016

Time: 2:00pm BST for one hour

Curators: Liz Wager @SideviewLiz and Nancy Owens, curator of @cochranecollab and part of the Cochrane Communications team

Hashtag: #cochraneauthor

Chat agenda
Welcome: Please let us know who you are, where you are, and what you’re working on

Q1 What do you think is important about the evidence and findings of this review?

Q2 Should we be worried about the lack of evidence in this area?

Q3 Is misconduct increasing or are we better at detection?

Q4 What sort of research do we need now?

Chat conclusion

We'll update this page with chat analytics and transcript following conclusion of the chat.
 

Chat guidelines
Help #cochraneauthor chats work for everyone by reviewing these guidelines.

Follow the @cochranecollab and chat curator handles provided in each chat announcement.

If you intend to tweet more than a handful of times, you may wish to let your followers know that you may be sending multiple tweets. That way they can ‘ignore’ you temporarily if the chat topic is not of interest to them.

During a chat, add the hashtag (tag) #cochraneauthor to all your tweets so that they can be aggregated. This means that: everyone following the tag will see your contributions; and when the chat transcript is generated there will be fewer confusing gaps in the interactions.

If your tweets are usually protected (i.e., if you have a padlock on your handle), people who are not your followers will not be able to see your contributions to the chat. Please turn this protection off if you plan to tweet into a #cochraneauthor chat. There are instructions for turning protection on and off here.

Note that, if you wish to, while a chat is in progress, you can engage in ‘side chats’ without the #cochraneauthor tag. You can review other conversations later. Side chats are not considered to be bad form!

The #cochraneauthor chat administrators find a Twitter management platform such as HootSuite, TweetChat, or TweetDeck makes it easier to participate in. All are free.


Cochrane Gynaecology and Fertility Group celebrate 20 years

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Cochrane Gynaecology and Fertility Group celebrate 20 yearsmumoquit@cochr…Tue, 04/19/2016 - 19:30
 Cochrane Gynaecology and Fertility Group celebrate 20 years

Cochrane Gynaecology and Fertility Group celebrated their 20 year anniversary with a series of workshops, a symposium...and cake!

cake

The Cochrane Gynaecology and Fertility Group (CGF) (formerly the Menstrual Disorders and Subfertility Group) is concerned with the systematic evaluation of the management and treatment of menstrual disorders and subfertility. 

20th

Welcome speeches by Sir Iain Chalmers and Professor Richard Lilford set the scene for the meeting and celebration. Keynote speakers included Dr David Tovey (Editor in Chief of the Cochrane Library), Dr Fergus Macbeth (oncologist and guideline developer), Dr Sheryl van der Poel (WHO), Dr Melanie Davies (NICE), Professor Ben Willem Mol ,and Professor Siladitya Bhattacharya. Other highlights included pre-symposium workshops offering editors and authors the opportunity to further develop their skills and expertise and a dinner gala at the Balliol College. The full program can be seen here.

A warm congratulations to CGF on this milestone!

opening20th partySpeechSpeech 2

Visit the Cochrane Gynaecology and Fertility Group web page.

Cochrane at the World Health Assembly 2016

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Cochrane at the World Health Assembly 2016mumoquit@cochr…Wed, 04/20/2016 - 18:02
Cochrane at the World Health Assembly 2016

The World Health Assembly (WHA) is the decision-making body of the World Health Organization (WHO). The main functions of the WHA are to determine the policies of the Organization, appoint the Director-General, supervise financial policies, and review and approve the proposed programme budget. The WHA is held annually in Geneva, Switzerland. this year's agenda can be found here.

As we did in 2015, Cochrane will send a small delegation to the WHA from 23-28 May 2016. If you are planning to attend the WHA or have any suggestions for the Cochrane delegation, please contact Cochrane Partnerships Coordinator, Sylvia de Haan.

 

 

Oral Health Co-ordinating Editors awarded honorary fellowships

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Oral Health Co-ordinating Editors awarded honorary fellowshipsmumoquit@cochr…Thu, 04/21/2016 - 16:34
Co-ordinating Editors awarded Honorary Fellowships

Co-ordinating Editors for Cochrane Oral HealthHelen Worthington and Jan Clarkson, have been awarded honorary fellowships from the Board of The Faculty of General Dental Practice (FGDP) at the Royal College of Surgeons of England in London. They were nominated for the awards by Cochrane colleague Trevor Johnson.

A faculty of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, the FGDP is the UK’s only professional membership body and provides guidance and education specifically for general dental practitioners and dental care professionals as part of its aim to continually improve practice. Fellowship is the highest award offered by the FGDP and is considered a pinnacle of achievement for those within the profession. It recognizes excellence in primary dental care and the commitment to professional development of its recipients.

Commenting on their awards, Helen and Jan said: “We are both honoured to receive the award. We recognize the potential to improve the quality of dental research in practice, where most of dentistry is delivered, and to increase its impact.” Both academics look forward to working more closely with the Faculty, representing all members of the dental team, in taking forward research in general practice and the translation of evidence for patient benefit.

Congratulations!

Vistit the Cochrane Oral Health website.

Cochrane Pain, Palliative and Supportive Care's 18th Birthday Celebration

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Cochrane Pain, Palliative and Supportive Care's 18th Birthday Celebrationhmillward@coch…Fri, 04/22/2016 - 10:08
18th birthday balloons

Join Cochrane Pain, Palliative and Supportive Care (PaPaS) on the 21st July to celebrate their 18th anniversary at the Saïd Business School in Oxford, UK.

PaPaS was registered as a Cochrane review group in 1998. We are celebrating with an afternoon event of topical presentations and discussions, followed by a drinks reception and evening garden party.

Places are limited; please contact us if you would like to attend.

Date

Thursday 21 July 2016

Times

  • Lunch available from 12.30 (BST)
  • Main event 13.30 – 17.00
  • Evening garden party from 17.00

Venue

The impressive Saïd Business School, opposite Oxford’s main train station.
Address: Saïd Business School, Park End Street, Oxford, OX1 1 HP. UK. T: +44 (0)1865 288800.

Agenda

First session (13.30 – 15.00)

  • Welcome
  • Brief History of PaPaS
  • Pain evidence- how evidence based medicine has changed the view of science or practice: short presentations from PaPaS Editors

Second session (15.30 – 17.00)

  • Rapid presentations from PaPaS contributors: the challenges of treating pain in the community
  • PaPaS in the Future: challenges and opportunities (interactive audience participation)

Evening event (from 17.00)

  • Drinks reception and summer garden party, with buffet from award-winning catering team.

Contact

Please contact Kerry Harding at kerry.harding@ndcn.ox.ac.uk if you have any questions, or Tweet us at @CochranePaPaS using the hashtag #PaPaS18.
 

Useful links

Cochrane contributor: Natalie Bradford

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Cochrane contributor: Natalie Bradfordmumoquit@cochr…Fri, 04/22/2016 - 17:37
Cochrane contributor: Natalie Bradford

This Cochrane Blog post highlights the contributions of Natalie Bradford PhD, MPH, BNurs, RN, Queensland Youth Cancer Service, Lady Cilento Children’s Hospital in Brisbane, Australia.

The Cochrane Nursing Care Field (CNCF) continues to expend the number of summaries produced within its collaboration of international nursing journals and widen its reach in the dissemination of best practices evidence in frontline primary health care, and much of the Field’s success in these areas is reliant on the substantial contributions of its volunteer writing staff. Natalie Bradford has become an active contributor to the CNCF and has produced numerous high quality Cochrane Review summaries that have been featured in many of the Field’s collaborating journals.   

With an extensive clinical background, Natalie Bradford has enjoyed a nursing career spanning more than 25 years. She commenced her nursing career in paediatric oncology and palliative care, where she worked on a part-time basis while her children were young. In 2009 Natalie started a research project with the University of Queensland, which opened up a whole new world for her. She started her Master’s in Public Health at this time and developed a keen interest in study design and epidemiological studies. During this time Natalie led numerous small research projects and was successful in getting this work published. Working within an academic environment, Natalie eventually decided to commence her PhD, which she completed in 2014. Her thesis investigated how home telehealth technologies could be used to deliver specialist palliative care services for children living in rural and remote parts of Queensland. Natalie now works as a Nurse Researcher for the Queensland Youth Cancer Service, and maintains an academic position with Queensland University of Technology.  

Natalie Bradford

On her reasons for joining and actively supporting the CNCF, Natalie writes: “Research has become a really important part of my practice and I get excited about the possibilities of making a difference and being able to improve outcomes for patients, or the quality and efficiency of services.  I completed a Cochrane review with some colleagues in 2014 and was simultaneously intrigued, inspired and daunted by the level of detail and the rigour and depth that was involved to complete the review! I also knew that many other nurses wouldn’t have the time or opportunity to even read the whole review, let alone partake in undertaking one.  This is why the CNCF Cochrane summaries are so important.  They make the evidence generated in a full review accessible and digestible for nurses.  I really enjoy writing for the CNCF, preparing a summary is a great way to stay on top of the current evidence, and to share relevant evidence with other.”

Thank you, Natalie for your contribution in helping to bring accessible Cochrane evidence to nurses globally!

 

Would your Cochrane Group like to tell the community about a beloved contributor? Email mumoquit@cochrane.org

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