Tuesday, January 28, 2020
Effect of THNPs on Heroin OD Mortality | Methodology
Effect of THNPs on Heroin OD Mortality | Methodology    Chapter 2. Methods  2.1 Introduction  This chapter contains a precise description of the process used to search and appraise the evidence for this systematic literature review. The search was carried out during August and September 2014. An in-depth description of how evidence and research available related to the PICO question were generated, will be discussed. As mentioned in the previous chapter, the aim of this dissertation is to determine the effect of THNPs to heroin users, on heroin OD mortality.  The analysing process of the PICO question, whether THNPs reduces the incidence of fatal heroin OD deaths, will be amplified through a description of the actual search strategy, and the methods used to appraise the retrieved studies. Through specific criteria, a systematic approach was applied in obtaining and selecting the relevant literature. Identified keywords used for the search syntaxes will be presented, together with the databases used for the retrieval of evidence, and the number of hits produced from each database. Search syntax is the relationship of a sequence of words used in a search strategy. A discussion of the inclusion and exclusion criteria set for this systematic review (SR) will follow, together with the methods of appraisal chosen to evaluate the studies.  2.2 Keywords and databases used    PICO Element    Description    Keywords    Population    Heroin injection users in the community    heroin users, injection drug users, drug users, opioid users    Intervention    Take-home naloxone program    take-home naloxone program, naloxone distribution program,    Comparison    No comparison    Outcome    Reduced incidence of fatal heroin OD deaths    OD reversal, OD prevention, opioid OD prevention, heroin OD prevention, harm reduction    According to Timmins and McCabe (2005) the cornerstone of an effective search strategy is the use of proper keywords. A number of keywords were formulated from the PICO question elements, and from the preliminary search of the literature. These were mainly identified from titles and keywords used in articles found from the preliminary search. Table 2.1 below, shows the keywords used in relation to each PICO element.  Table 2.1 Keywords developed to describe the PICO framework  The main electronic systematic search with the search syntaxes explained further on in this chapter was carried out using different databases accessed from the Hybrid Discovery (HyDi) available from the online library at the University of Malta. Relevant databases were found on HyDi by choosing the category ââ¬ËHealth Sciencesââ¬â¢ and sub-category ââ¬ËNursingââ¬â¢ since the other sub-category is ââ¬ËMidwiferyââ¬â¢ which is unrelated. Six databases were used to conduct a search for the literature. These were Academic Search Complete, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health  CINAHL Plus with Full Text, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Cochrane Database of SRs; via EBSCO host search engine together with Medline via ProQuest search engine, and Science Direct. In addition to these databases Google Scholar was also utilised, but the search syntaxes combinations could not be used since the search engine does not have an advanced search strategy, a   nd the search resulted in large thousands of articles. Therefore simple keywords alone were used to search for any other relevant studies, or to obtain full text versions which are not available in other databases. Strengths and limitations of each database are described below in table 2.2.    Database    Strength    Limitation    Academic Search Complete    Daily updates  Provides full text journals    Available only from EBSCO host    CINAHL Plus with Full Text    Weekly updates  Over 950 journals  Covers references and abstracts from 1982 onwards    Available only from EBSCO host  English and American language bias    Cochrane Library    Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials  Cochrane Database of SRs    Research analyzed using trustworthy methods  Large source of literature  Up-to-date  Complete text reviews    Limited by restrictions    Medline    Records indexed with Medical Subject Heading (MeSHà ®)  Provides a large source of life sciences evidence needed by health professionals    Limited by restrictions    Science Direct    Provides full text from Elsevier Science journals  Provides full text articles    Limited by restrictions    Google Scholar    Free access web based search engine    Large amount of results due to lack of an advanced search strategy     Table 2.2 Databases strengths  Limitations  2.3 Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria  For readers to assess reliability and validity of a SR they have to be provided with a set of inclusion and exclusion criteria (Cronin, Ryan, Coughlan, 2007). Furthermore, Torgerson (2003) suggests that a set of inclusion and exclusion criteria are important so that throughout the search, only the articles that will answer the PICO question are extracted while others are eliminated.  During the preliminary search it was noted that literature about the subject lacks randomized controlled trials (RCTsââ¬â¢), meta-analysis, and SRs. As shown in figure 2.1, these study designs are found at the top of the hierarchy of evidence as described by Aslam et.al (2012). Hence, all types of study designs were part of the inclusion criteria. Sibbald  Roland (1998) said that clinical trials are known to be a gold standard to perform good evidence based practice and although they were in the inclusion criteria, the results were negative since up-to date no RCTs have taken place. Although this is a major limitation for this literature review, one must keep in mind that currently, the first and largest RCT is being carried out as described in chapter 1.  Source type selected in all databases was ââ¬ËAcademic Journalsââ¬â¢ since books, newspaper articles, and magazines are not of strong evidence for evidence based healthcare because sometimes they do not have any type of study design, and may be narrative. Each search was limited to English language literature only. Studies that administered intranasal (IN) naloxone were excluded since this method is an off-label method (Doe-Simkins, Walley, Epstein,  Moyer, 2009), and in an RCT by Kelly et al. (2005) it was found that IM naloxone was clinically more effective than IN naloxone (6 minutes vs 8 minutes). Table 2.3 and table 2.4 below describe further in detail the inclusion and exclusion criteria respectively.    Figure 2.1 The Hierarchy of Evidence Pyramid (adapted from Aslam et al. 2012, p.3)     Table 2.3 Inclusion Criteria    Inclusion Criteria    Rationale    Literature had to be in English language    Not possible to translate to English    Studies published from 1980ââ¬â¢s till September 2014    Studies about THN commenced in the 90ââ¬â¢s, and so all studies are obtained (Darke  Hall, 1997)    Involving heroin injection drug users above 18 years of age    Since the population are adults injecting heroin, and in all studies found, drug users were of 18 years and above    Involving THNP    Since this review concerns the outcome of THNP    Experimental studies including RCTsââ¬â¢, reviews, observational studies including cohort studies and longitudinal studies    To include all study designs and to not eliminate valuable literature    Study needed to have an outcome of survival rates or OD reversals associated to THNP    If outcomes were different, studies would not answer the PICO question    Exclusion Criteria    Rationale    Studies researching attitudes, views and opinions of health care practitioners providing THN and other stakeholders such as police    Outcome of studies unrelated to PICO question    Studies about experiences of fatal OD victims where naloxone was not provided to heroin users as a preventive measure of fatal OD    Studies had to have THNP studied as a preventive measure rather than other measures    Development of instrument tools for THNP evaluation    These instruments do not answer the PICO question    Users of prescription opiates including methadone    Since population is specifically heroin injection drug users    Studies including HIV, AIDS, buprenorphine, methadone, and supervising injecting facilities as a main topic    For the fact that THNP is the main subject and intervention of this SR    Studies were intra nasal naloxone was used    Naloxone nasal spray is not yet approved or licensed anywhere in the world    Studies where naloxone was not administered by any of the participants    The outcome was not attributed directly to naloxone administration    Studies not published in English    Not possible to translate to English     Table 2.4 Exclusion Criteria  2.4 Search Strategy  The keywords mentioned in table 2.1 were developed so that each PICO element has its own search syntax as identified by Bettany-Saltikov, (2012). The use of search syntaxes has assisted in narrowing the search to the most relevant studies to the PICO question. Table 2.5 below, shows the search syntax used for each PICO item.    PICO element    Search syntax number    Search syntax    Population    Search syntax 1    heroin users OR injection drug users OR drug users OR opioid users    Intervention    Search syntax 2    take-home naloxone program OR naloxone distribution program    Outcome    Search syntax 3    overdose reversal OR overdose prevention OR opioid overdose prevention OR heroin overdose prevention OR harm reduction OR overdose mortality    Table 2.5 Search syntaxes  Search syntaxes were combined as described here:    Population (syntax 1) AND Intervention (syntax 2)  Population (syntax 1) AND Outcome (syntax 3)  Intervention (syntax 2) AND Outcome (syntax 3)    Boolean logic operator ââ¬ËORââ¬â¢ was used to combine each keyword of each PICO element syntax, while the operator ââ¬ËANDââ¬â¢ was used to combine the PICO elements together as described above.  In all search fields of the databases used except Google Scholar, ââ¬ËIn All Textââ¬â¢ was selected for all searches. In Google Scholar the keywords searched independently were ââ¬Ëtake-home naloxoneââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ënaloxone distributionââ¬â¢. These keywords were searched in titles only, since when searched for anywhere in the article the results were over 50,000 with most of them irrelevant to the dissertation.  As shown in table 2.6 below, the defined search resulted in 2,260 articles. After the titles were evaluated whether they fit with the inclusion and exclusion criteria mentioned previously, and removing duplicate articles the search results were reduced to 160 articles by reading through the titles. The abstracts of these 160 articles were read and consequently 25 articles were noted to be directly related to the PICO question addressed in this dissertation, as they all met the inclusion criteria. One of the 25 articles which is a study by Lenton  Hargreaves (2000) was not available online for free. The author, Professor Lenton was contacted via e-mail. Fortunately there was an immediate response, and the article was provided for free. However, after reading these 25 articles, 15 were eliminated because they had one or more of the exclusion criteria fit. The remaining 10 articles were identified and had fit all of the inclusion and exclusion criteria and were chosen for the critical a   ppraisal of this systematic literature review. Furthermore the search was enhanced by looking up at all the reference lists of the final articles chosen for critical appraisal, but no new studies were found. Identified studies for critical appraisal are the following: Strang et al. (2008), Piper et al. (2008), Tobin, Sherman, Beilenson, Welsh,  Latkin (2009), Enteen et al. (2010), Wagner et al. (2010), Bennett, Bell, Tomedi, Hulsey,  Kral (2011), Bennett  Holloway (2012), Lankenau et al. (2013), Banjo (2014), and Clark, Wilder,  Winstanley (2014). In addition to the electronic search, a hand search was done within the University of Malta library which did not produce any results. Table 2.6 below presents the number of hits obtained from each of the databases above and the different search syntaxes combination.    Database    Keywords    Number of hits    Academic Search Complete    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 2    274    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 3    272    search syntax 2 AND search syntax 3    55    CINAHL Plus with Full Text    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 2    7    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 3    114    search syntax 2 AND search syntax 3    10    Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 2    0    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 3    0    search syntax 2 AND search syntax 3    0    Cochrane Database of SRs    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 2    0    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 3    1    search syntax 2 AND search syntax 3    0    Medline    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 2    31    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 3    228    search syntax 2 AND search syntax 3    28    Science Direct    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 2    532    search syntax 1 AND search syntax 3    485    search syntax 2 AND search syntax 3    145    Google Scholar    take-home naloxone, naloxone distribution    78    Total number of literature found = 2,260     Table 2.6 Number of articles found from each search  2.5 Refining of the research question  After finding the relevant literature to the original PICO question, and considering properly the population being studied, the research question was duly refined since this systematic literature review will be based on the impact of THNP effect on heroin OD deaths amongst heroin injection drug users. Initial PICO question was:  ââ¬ËDo naloxone take-home programs provided to drug users in the community reduce the incidence of fatal opioid OD?ââ¬â¢  The question was refined to:  Do naloxone take-home programs reduce the incidence of fatal heroin OD amongst heroin injection users?  The refining of the PICO question was essential since some of the literature concerned prescription opioid users or general drug users, but the reviewerââ¬â¢s main interest is heroin injection users.  2.6 Methods of Appraisal  After identifying the relevant studies and refining the PICO question, the next step for this dissertation was to critically appraise the literature. This will be covered in chapter 3. Critical appraisal is the evaluation of strength and quality of research studies in order to deliver evidence-based clinical decisions and after determining the worthiness of different studies through the use of different critical appraisal tools, multiple research findings can be synthesized together to develop evidence-based-practice (LoBiondo-Woods  Haber, 2013). Furthermore, Burls (2009) argues that studies being biased can result in false outcomes and conclusions, because they are not composed of an acceptable quality. A bias is an orderly deviation of the results occurring from the way that a study is led, investigated or reported. In light of this, critical appraisal tools were developed to help researchers in identifying valid and reliable studies. Specific critical appraisal tools in the form    of checklists are used to analyse different study designs. Commonly used appraisal tools are:    Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP)  Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN)  Centre for Evidence Based Mental Health (CEBMH)  Critically Appraise Topic (CAT)    After studying and considering all of the above methods of appraisal, together with other appraisal tools, it was decided that the CASP appraisal tools are to be used for critically appraising the identified studies relevant to the PICO question. The reason for choosing the CASP appraisal tools is because it is clear, concise, and easy to understand. CASP offers different checklists appropriate for different research designs where one can critically evaluate research through a set of questions and helps in determining the quality of the literature being appraised. At this phase, the studies were also rated and arranged according to the hierarchy of evidence adopted from Aslam (2012) as shown in figure 2.1.  2.7 Conclusion  In conclusion, the studyââ¬â¢s main objective is to determine whether THNPs reduces the mortality rate of heroin OD. Several keywords were identified from the PICO question elements, and from preliminary search results. These keywords were systematically searched in different databases using different search syntaxes combinations. A set of inclusion and exclusion criteria were then set up in order to get to the studies relevant to the PICO question. PICO question was then refined and then it was decided to use the CASP appraisal tools for evaluating the relevant studies which will be discussed in the next chapter.  Words 1763    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.