Litcius/Paper detail

Making the case for librarian expertise to support evidence synthesis for the sustainable development goals

Kate Ghezzi‐Kopel, Jessica Ault, Gracian Chimwaza, Florian Diekmann, Erin Eldermire, Nasra Gathoni, Julia Kelly, Alison Annet Kinengyere, Megan Kocher, Edda Tandi Lwoga, Jessica Page, Sarah Young, Jaron Porciello

2021Research Synthesis Methods17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Evidence syntheses that engage librarians as co-authors produce higher-quality results than those that do not. Trained as teachers, researchers, and information managers, librarians possess expert knowledge on research methodologies and information retrieval approaches that are critical for evidence synthesis. Researchers are under increasing pressure to produce evidence syntheses to inform practice and policymaking. Many fields outside of health science and medicine, however, do not have established guidelines, processes, or methodologies. This article describes how librarians led the creation of an interdisciplinary toolkit for researchers new to evidence synthesis. The implementation of the tools, including a protocol, supported eight evidence syntheses focused on effective agricultural interventions published in a special collection in Nature Research in October 2020. This article is a step-by-step overview of the tools and process. We advocate that librarian collaboration in evidence synthesis must become the norm, not the exception. Evidence synthesis project leads without access to a qualified librarian may use this toolkit as a point of entry for production of transparent, reproducible reviews.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceEvidence-based practiceKnowledge managementProcess (computing)Psychological interventionEvidence-based medicineEngineering ethicsMEDLINEMedicinePolitical scienceAlternative medicineLawOperating systemPsychiatryEngineeringPathologyHealth Sciences Research and Education