2016
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01811
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The Development of a Checklist to Enhance Methodological Quality in Intervention Programs

Abstract: The methodological quality of primary studies is an important issue when performing meta-analyses or systematic reviews. Nevertheless, there are no clear criteria for how methodological quality should be analyzed. Controversies emerge when considering the various theoretical and empirical definitions, especially in relation to three interrelated problems: the lack of representativeness, utility, and feasibility. In this article, we (a) systematize and summarize the available literature about methodological qua… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…The methodological quality of the studies was appraised with a well-established standardised 12-item checklist, 24 in which every item represents a methodological feature: inclusion/exclusion criteria, methodology/ design, attrition rate, attrition between-groups, exclusions after, follow-up, occasion of measurements, pre/ post measures, dependent variables, control techniques, construct definition and imputing missing data. The codification criteria proposed by the checklist authors was used.…”
Section: Quality Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The methodological quality of the studies was appraised with a well-established standardised 12-item checklist, 24 in which every item represents a methodological feature: inclusion/exclusion criteria, methodology/ design, attrition rate, attrition between-groups, exclusions after, follow-up, occasion of measurements, pre/ post measures, dependent variables, control techniques, construct definition and imputing missing data. The codification criteria proposed by the checklist authors was used.…”
Section: Quality Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The questionnaire used to obtain validity evidence based on test content through experts' judgment was composed of the 56 items obtained in the previous mixed-method study ordered in the four factors or dimensions found (see Supplementary Data 2 ). Each item presented three five-point Likert scales (Sanduvete-Chaves et al, 2013 ) to measure their representativeness (R), utility (U), and feasibility (F) (Chacón-Moscoso et al, 2016 ). Additionally, there was a final open-format question to receive comments for improvements for the proposed scale.…”
Section: Study 2: Validity Evidence Of the Resultant Instrument Basedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We delimited the main dimensions of observational studies and a list of items to measure those dimensions based on three information sources: (1) A systematic review (Chacón-Moscoso et al, 2016) was conducted of 12 databases that were of interest due to their content (Web of Science, Scopus, Springer, EBSCO Online, Medline, CINAHL, EconLit, MathSciNet, Current Contents, Humanities Index, ERIC, and PsycINFO). We found 548 different ways to measure methodological quality in primary studies.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As authors do not have a checklist for reporting, transparency may be affected, and important information for assessing the quality of the study and, therefore, its degree of risk of bias, may be omitted (Portell et al, 2015). (2) Authors who want to publish these kinds of studies do not have a checklist to confirm that all the important elements were considered in the study and included in the report, and reviewers of these same studies lack a useful tool for determining the indicators to consider when accepting or rejecting their publication in a scientific journal (Chacón-Moscoso et al, 2016). …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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