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    Reporting of methodological studies in health research : a protocol for the development of the MethodologIcal STudy reportIng Checklist (MISTIC)

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    CITATION: Lawson, Daeria O. et al. 2020. Reporting of methodological studies in health research : a protocol for the development of the MethodologIcal STudy reportIng Checklist (MISTIC). BMJ Open. 10(12):e040478, doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040478.The original publication is available at: https://bmjopen.bmj.comIntroduction Methodological studies (ie, studies that evaluate the design, conduct, analysis or reporting of other studies in health research) address various facets of health research including, for instance, data collection techniques, differences in approaches to analyses, reporting quality, adherence to guidelines or publication bias. As a result, methodological studies can help to identify knowledge gaps in the methodology of health research and strategies for improvement in research practices. Differences in methodological study names and a lack of reporting guidance contribute to lack of comparability across studies and difficulties in identifying relevant previous methodological studies. This paper outlines the methods we will use to develop an evidence-based tool—the MethodologIcal STudy reportIng Checklist—to harmonise naming conventions and improve the reporting of methodological studies. Methods and analysis We will search for methodological studies in the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Cochrane Library, Embase, MEDLINE, Web of Science, check reference lists and contact experts in the field. We will extract and summarise data on the study names, design and reporting features of the included methodological studies. Consensus on study terms and recommended reporting items will be achieved via video conference meetings with a panel of experts including researchers who have published methodological studies.Publisher's versio

    Guidelines for reporting methodological studies in health research

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    The primary objective of this work is to develop a guideline to standardize the nomenclature and reporting of methodological studies in the context of health research (e.g. meta-epidemiological studies, methodological reviews, systematic surveys, etc.). Based on consensus with expert stakeholders, this guideline and accompanying statement will highlight the necessary methodological features that should be included when reporting methodological studies
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