2019
DOI: 10.1111/wvn.12414
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Has the Reporting Quality of Systematic Review Abstracts in Nursing Improved Since the Release of PRISMA for Abstracts? A Survey of High‐Profile Nursing Journals

Abstract: Background The PRISMA for Abstracts (PRISMA‐A) was developed to guide authors to present a structured abstract. However, the adherence of abstracts to these guidelines in some areas was of concern. Aims To determine whether the publication of PRISMA‐A resulted in an improvement in the abstracts reported with nursing systematic reviews (SRs). Methods This was a cross‐sectional study. We searched PubMed for randomized controlled trials–based SRs published in top‐tier nursing journals. A PRISMA‐A checklist was us… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Maticic et al, in the field of anaesthesiology, and Bigna et al, in the field of general medicine, reported poor or no improvement after checklist publication [17]. In agreement with our results, other authors in different fields of medicine and dentistry reported how information about registration is often missing in SRs´abstracts [13][14][15][16]18]. The lack of registration reports is surprising, especially in the SRs published after 2013, taking into account the wide acceptance of registration databases such as PROSPERO, which from its launch in 2011 to 2017 registered more than 30,000 SRs [19].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Maticic et al, in the field of anaesthesiology, and Bigna et al, in the field of general medicine, reported poor or no improvement after checklist publication [17]. In agreement with our results, other authors in different fields of medicine and dentistry reported how information about registration is often missing in SRs´abstracts [13][14][15][16]18]. The lack of registration reports is surprising, especially in the SRs published after 2013, taking into account the wide acceptance of registration databases such as PROSPERO, which from its launch in 2011 to 2017 registered more than 30,000 SRs [19].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…According to our findings, a higher number of authors is related to a better quality report, and the same result was also highlighted by previous research [13,14,16,18]. In contrast, Bigna et al (2016), in top-rated medical journals, reported no association between the number of authors and the quality of the report [20].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…However, findings are mixed on whether the release of PRISMA for Abstracts has improved the quality of abstract reporting. Interestingly, one consistent finding across these studies [49,50] is that authors do not report all 12 PRISMA for Abstracts items. A study by O'Donohoe et al [14] found that systematic reviews published in journals with higher abstract word limits had significantly higher PRISMA for Abstracts reporting scores.…”
Section: Xsl • Fomentioning
confidence: 91%