Disadvantages of literature review in research

Advantages and disadvantages of systematic reviews

All Courses SLR1: Understanding Systematic Reviews 1 What are systematic reviews? Advantages and disadvantages of systematic reviews

Click each tab to learn more about the advantages and disadvantages of SLRs.

Advantages

SLRs are comprehensive

If done properly, all relevant research [all sources, types, and languages] is identified and appraised .

SLRs save time for readers

People who need to know the overall answer to a question from all currently available studies can get a quick answer.

SLRs are more reliable and useful than any single study

Their conclusions come from a combination of multiple studies that have been assessed for relevance and quality.

SLRs can boost a researchers career

Systematic reviews tend to be widely cited by other researchers.

SLRs inform evidence-based practice and decision-making

The best available information can be applied in daily professional life.

Disadvantages

The process may take many months

It can take time to thoroughly conduct an SLR and formally publish it.

An SLR can quickly become outdated

A systematic review needs to be regularly updated to include all new published primary research that has accumulated since starting.

There may not be enough research in the literature to analyze

For example, there may only be one randomized controlled trial, or only best practice guidelines or consensus statements from scholarly or professional associations.

An SLRs quality depends on what has been published in the literature.

This is known as garbage in, garbage out [or GIGO].

Unfortunately, some research studies are of poor quality or poorly performed. Others are incompletely reported or partially duplicate data.

Systematic reviewers should include comments appraising the evidence sources, warnings on how trustworthy the overall conclusions are, and recommendations on future primary studies needed.

Some studies are biased or simply never published [called publication bias], because researchers and journals tend to prefer to publish only positive results.
Dr. Trevor Lane, COPE
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