CERQual: A new approach for supporting the use of qualitative evidence in decision making
A new paper published in PLOS Medicine describes an innovative and transparent approach for assessing how much confidence to place in findings from qualitative evidence syntheses.
The new approach, known as CERQual (‘Confidence in the Evidence from Reviews of Qualitative research’), is designed to help decision makers use qualitative evidence for decisions and policies about healthcare and social welfare.
Why is CERQual important?
Findings from syntheses of qualitative research can help to provide evidence on the feasibility and acceptability of interventions. They can also offer better insights into the factors influencing intervention implementation. Such syntheses are used more and more frequently in decision-making related to health and social policies. However, the paper shows that until recently the methods for assessing how much confidence to place in findings from qualitative evidence syntheses have been poorly developed.
Four components
There are four key components to the CERQual approach, namely assessments of: (1) the methodological limitations of the qualitative studies contributing to a review finding, (2) the relevance to the review question of the studies contributing to a review finding, (3) the coherence of the review finding, and (4) the adequacy of data supporting a review finding.
Professor Jane Noyes from the School of Social Sciences at Bangor University and co-developer of the CERQual approach said that “the use of CERQual can help the authors of qualitative evidence syntheses to consider, analyse, and report review findings in a more useful and usable way. CERQual can help decision makers and other users understand how much confidence to place in findings from qualitative evidence syntheses. This will assist them in judging how much emphasis to give to findings when they are making their decisions.”
The CERQual approach has already been used in two guidelines published by the World Health Organization (WHO). Metin Gülmezoglu, from WHO’s Department of Reproductive Health and Research* and responsible for one of the guidelines, says: “The CERQual approach was very valuable in helping us to use qualitative evidence appropriately in developing the guideline recommendations. We anticipate wide use of the approach in the future within WHO and other organizations involved in guideline development.”
New opportunities
CERQual is being developed by a subgroup of the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation) Working Group (www.gradeworkinggroup.org). This is an informal collaboration of those who have an interest in how to assess the confidence in evidence from qualitative evidence syntheses. We’re encouraging those keen to work in this area to join the group via our website (www.cerqual.org) and to contribute to the development of the CERQual approach.”
The CERQual paper is now freely available on the PLOS Medicine website at http://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1001895
* The WHO Department of Reproductive Health and Research includes the UNDP/UNFPA/UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Special programme of research, development and research training in human reproduction (HRP).
Publication date: 6 November 2015