Prevention and treatment of acute malnutrition in humanitarian emergencies : a multi-organisation collaboration to increase access to synthesised evidence
Date
2019-05-31
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
SpringerOpen (part of Springer Nature)
Abstract
Background: Program decision-making to prevent and treat acute malnutrition in an emergency can be hampered
by a lack of accessible and relevant overviews of directly available robust research evidence. There is often evidence
from related settings such as from low-income countries, but this is dispersed across many databases, may be
inaccessible and requires assessment of its relevance to the humanitarian setting. We describe a process whereby a
multi-disciplinary, international group of specialists worked together to build relevant and effective collections of
available systematic reviews on acute malnutrition, published and disseminated as online collections, to improve
access to the evidence and concise, synthesised, relevant up to date evidence for programming. By describing this
process, we hope to inspire other professional groups to take part in similar multi-stakeholder, multi-disciplinary
projects.
Objectives: This project was designed to make the evidence from relevant systematic reviews about malnutrition as
accessible as possible to support evidence-based decision-making and to guide future research on the prevention and
treatment of acute malnutrition in humanitarian emergencies.
Methods: Between March 2017 and March 2018, a large group (21 volunteers and stakeholders) with different
backgrounds collaborated to review and curate collections of systematic reviews of interventions for the prevention
and treatment of moderate and severe acute malnutrition relevant to humanitarian emergencies. The methodology
loosely followed general guidance for overviews of systematic reviews with a pre-defined question (formulated using
the PICOS format) and search strategies applied to multiple databases. Pairs of collaborators first screened the search
yields to identify potentially eligible reviews, where after other pairs screened the list of potentially eligible reviews for
relevance and thus included in the final collections.
Results: Search strategies were run in 12 databases, in the week of 15 September 2017, yielding a total of 4646 records
after de-duplication. At this point, Cochrane reviews (n = 463) and non-Cochrane reviews (n = 4183) were separated and
handled by different teams to compile three linked collections, namely the Evidence Aid Collection, consisting of
relevant non-Cochrane reviews, and two Cochrane Special Collections, consisting of relevant Cochrane reviews, one for
prevention and the other for treatment of acute malnutrition. The collections were published on the Evidence Aid
website on 12 March 2018 and Cochrane website in August 2018.
Discussion: Through this collaboration, we have successfully generated three collections of systematic reviews to
guide prevention and management of acute malnutrition in humanitarian emergencies: an Evidence Aid collection of
non-Cochrane reviews, and two Cochrane Special Collections of Cochrane reviews. These collections provide accessible
synthesised evidence that can be used to inform decision-making on strategies and policies in the humanitarian
emergency and disaster risk reduction sectors and to guide future research by identifying gaps in robust evidence and
areas that are under-researched. These collections did not set out to assess methodological quality, appraise in detail
what the reviews found or summarise the evidence, but rather to curate the identified relevant systematic reviews into
online resources for others to use. This unique collaboration of different individuals, organisations and stakeholders, and
the collation of robust evidence can be repeated for other subjects, and Evidence Aid is eager to support new collections
around other topics relevant to humanitarian emergencies.
Description
CITATION: Allen, C., et al. 2019. Prevention and treatment of acute malnutrition in humanitarian emergencies : a multi-organisation collaboration to increase access to synthesised evidence. Journal of International Humanitarian Action, 4:11, doi:10.1186/s41018-019-0057-8.
The original publication is available at https://link.springer.com
The original publication is available at https://link.springer.com
Keywords
Malnutrition -- Prevention -- Developing countries, Malnutrition -- Treatment -- Developing countries, Emergency management -- Developing countries, Humanitarian emergencies -- Developing countries, Systematic reviews (Medical research)
Citation
Allen, C., et al. 2019. Prevention and treatment of acute malnutrition in humanitarian emergencies : a multi-organisation collaboration to increase access to synthesised evidence. Journal of International Humanitarian Action, 4:11, doi:10.1186/s41018-019-0057-8