Difference between revisions of "Resource:3f0172f6-1f9d-46b3-af7f-1ba4e4ae4619"

From The Embassy of Good Science
 
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{{Resource
 
{{Resource
 
|Resource Type=Guidelines
 
|Resource Type=Guidelines
|Title=Reporting guidelines: The EQUATOR Network
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|Title=The EQUATOR Network: Reporting guidelines
 
|Is About=What should be included within research reports? Reporting guidelines are consensus-based recommendations for minimum standards of reporting. They are structured and simple tools for researchers to be used during the writing process. The EQUATOR Network defines a reporting guideline as“[a] checklist, flow diagram, or structured text to guide authors in reporting a specific type of research, developed using explicit methodology.” <ref>What is a reporting guideline. Available at:  
 
|Is About=What should be included within research reports? Reporting guidelines are consensus-based recommendations for minimum standards of reporting. They are structured and simple tools for researchers to be used during the writing process. The EQUATOR Network defines a reporting guideline as“[a] checklist, flow diagram, or structured text to guide authors in reporting a specific type of research, developed using explicit methodology.” <ref>What is a reporting guideline. Available at:  
  

Latest revision as of 13:37, 20 October 2020

Guidelines

The EQUATOR Network: Reporting guidelines

What is this about?

What should be included within research reports? Reporting guidelines are consensus-based recommendations for minimum standards of reporting. They are structured and simple tools for researchers to be used during the writing process. The EQUATOR Network defines a reporting guideline as“[a] checklist, flow diagram, or structured text to guide authors in reporting a specific type of research, developed using explicit methodology.” [1]

Why is this important?

Reporting guidelines are essential in disseminating research results and supporting best research practices. Using guidelines will lead to more complete papers, increasing the quality of papers at the same time. There are several ethical advances related to using guidelines, such as fairly using resources, minimizing risk of harm and maximizing benefit of research [1]. As a result this might lead to a reduce in research waste. The aim of a reporting guideline is to ensure that, for instance, readers understand the text, research can be replicated by other researchers, that the research can be included in a systematic review or that it can aid doctors in making clinical decisions. A reporting guideline should include at least a clear list of what should appear in a paper and how that list was developed [2].

  1. Nicholls, S. G., Langan, S. M., Benchimol, E. I., & Moher, D. (2016). Reporting transparency: making the ethical mandate explicit.BMC medicine, 14(1), 44
  2. What is a reporting guideline. Available at: https://www.equator-network.org/about-us/what-is-a-reporting-guideline/

For whom is this important?

What are the best practices?

There are hundreds of different reporting guidelines which an author can choose from. Selecting the right guideline seems difficult, but has been made easier with the use of a few tools. This flowchart depicts in several easy steps which of the most common research methods (i.e. systematic review, randomized trials, observational studies) match a reporting guideline. If you have a more specific study, this reporting guideline wizard was developed to reveal which guideline you can use. Please visit the EQUATOR Network for more information on reporting medical research.
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