Volume 15, Issue 6 pp. 1025-1028

Systematic reviews to support evidence-based psychiatry: what about schizophrenia?

Massimo Morlino MD

Corresponding Author

Massimo Morlino MD

Professor,

Professor Massimo Morlino
Piazzetta Olivella 13
80135 Naples
Italy
E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Antonio Calento MD

Antonio Calento MD

Resident in Psychiaty,

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Gennaro Pannone MD

Gennaro Pannone MD

Resident in Psychiaty,

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Gianluca Ventrella DR

Gianluca Ventrella DR

Psychologist,

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Vittorio Schiavone MD PhD

Vittorio Schiavone MD PhD

Specialist in Psychiaty, Department of Neuroscience, University ‘Federico II’, Naples, Italy

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First published: 23 December 2009
Citations: 4

Abstract

Objective To assess whether systematic reviews (SRs), the gold standard for scientific research, can offer valuable support in evidence-based psychiatry in the treatment of schizophrenia.

Methods We used three database services (Ovid, PubMed and Cochrane) to identify SRs related to schizophrenia, found 163 reviews and grouped them by topic. We then evaluated each study's conclusions and divided them into three groups based on results (ranging from certain to null conclusions).

Results SRs of pharmacological treatments represented 59% of the studies sampled, only 23% of which had reached certain conclusions. Other clinical topics were less frequently represented and had achieved lower degrees of certainty.

Conclusions Only 40 SRs (22 studies investigating pharmacological treatment) provided clear-cut answers to clinical questions examined. Results therefore showed that SRs provide a certain but rather limited contribution to scientific evidence in the field of schizophrenia.

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