Rapid Reviews

This is a course on rapid reviews. A rapid review is similar to a systematic review, except that it uses shortcuts and other tools to speed up the process. Rapid review methods are often used when decision-makers need urgent information and just can’t wait a year or more for the results from a typical systematic review. 

This course was created by the Brown University’s Center for Evidence Synthesis in Health (CESH) in partnership with the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. 

Although some examples of rapid reviews are from the Canadian healthcare and health policy context, the methods described are globally applicable.

For more background on what a systematic review is and how it might help you answer an important question, check out our intro course.

If you’re ready to learn about rapid reviews, click here to get started!

Course Information

Free

FREE

What is a rapid review?

What this course will cover
What is a rapid review?
There is no one definition of a “rapid review”

Speed up a systematic review

Same resources, more volunteers
Same resources, better technology

 Rapid review shortcuts + consequences

Potential shortcut #1: Restrict your search
Potential shortcut #2: Simplify your screening process
Potential shortcut #3: Change the way you extract data
Potential shortcut #4: Synthesize your evidence quickly
Potential shortcut #5: Skip some reporting standards
Typical rapid review formats
Shortcuts summary

Rapid reviews in action

Summary

Summary

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