Applying systematic review search methods to the grey literature: a case study examining guidelines for school-based breakfast programs in Canada
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Date
2015-10-15
Authors
Godin, Katelyn Marina
Stapleton, Jackie
Kirkpatrick, Sharon I.
Hanning, Rhona
Leatherdale, Scott T.
Advisor
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BioMedCentral
Abstract
Grey literature is an important source of information for large-scale review syntheses. However, there
are many characteristics of grey literature that make it difficult to search systematically. Further, there is no ‘gold
standard’ for rigorous systematic grey literature search methods and few resources on how to conduct this type of
search. This paper describes systematic review search methods that were developed and applied to complete a
case study systematic review of grey literature that examined guidelines for school-based breakfast programs in
Canada.
Methods: A grey literature search plan was developed to incorporate four different searching strategies: (1) grey
literature databases, (2) customized Google search engines, (3) targeted websites, and (4) consultation with contact
experts. These complementary strategies were used to minimize the risk of omitting relevant sources. Since abstracts
are often unavailable in grey literature documents, items’ abstracts, executive summaries, or table of contents
(whichever was available) were screened. Screening of publications’ full-text followed. Data were extracted on the
organization, year published, who they were developed by, intended audience, goal/objectives of document, sources
of evidence/resources cited, meals mentioned in the guidelines, and recommendations for program delivery.
Results: The search strategies for identifying and screening publications for inclusion in the case study review was
found to be manageable, comprehensive, and intuitive when applied in practice. The four search strategies of the grey
literature search plan yielded 302 potentially relevant items for screening. Following the screening process, 15
publications that met all eligibility criteria remained and were included in the case study systematic review. The
high-level findings of the case study systematic review are briefly described.
Conclusions: This article demonstrated a feasible and seemingly robust method for applying systematic search
strategies to identify web-based resources in the grey literature. The search strategy we developed and tested is
amenable to adaptation to identify other types of grey literature from other disciplines and answering a wide
range of research questions. This method should be further adapted and tested in future research syntheses.
Description
Keywords
grey literature, systematic review search methods, breakfast program guidelines, Research Subject Categories::MEDICINE