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Barriers and Enablers to Using Intervention Reporting Guidelines in Sports and Exercise Medicine Trials: A Mixed-Methods Study / Harrison Hansford in Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy, vol. 54,02 (février 2024)
[article]
in Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy > vol. 54,02 (février 2024) . - p. 142-152
Titre : Barriers and Enablers to Using Intervention Reporting Guidelines in Sports and Exercise Medicine Trials: A Mixed-Methods Study Type de document : article de périodique Auteurs : Harrison Hansford ; [et al.] Année de publication : 2024 Article en page(s) : p. 142-152 Langues : Français (fre) Descripteurs (mots clés) : [Thésaurus HELB]:Paramédical:Entraînement sportif
[Thésaurus HELB]:Paramédical:Recherche qualitative /Méthodes
[Thésaurus Type de publication]Essai contrôlé randomisé
[Thésaurus Type de publication]Guide de bonnes pratiquesRésumé : OBJECTIVE: To identify barriers and facilitators for using intervention reporting guidelines (CERT and TIDieR) from authors of randomized controlled trials in sports and exercise medicine journals.
DESIGN: Mixed-methods cross-sectional online survey.
METHODS: We recruited authors of randomized controlled trials published from June 2, 2018, to June 2, 2022, in the 10 leading sports and exercise medicine journals. We invited authors of eligible trials to complete an online survey that included multiple-choice and Likert-scale questions, as well as open-ended free-text questions on the barriers and facilitators to using intervention reporting guidelines. We used descriptive analysis to summarize the quantitative data and a hybrid deductive-inductive thematic analysis to identify barriers and facilitators from the qualitative data. We conducted a subgroup analysis to explore differences in barriers and facilitators between early-mid career researchers and senior researchers.
RESULTS: Eighty-four participants from 21 countries completed the survey (44 early-mid–career researchers, 40 senior researchers). We identified 8 themes relating to using intervention reporting guidelines. Themes classified as barriers related to publication constraints (word count limits), low awareness of intervention reporting guidelines, unclear benefits of the guidelines, and the increased burden imposed upon the researcher. Themes classified as facilitators related to journal requirements for guidelines use, the desire to accurately describe interventions, recommendations from other researchers, and reporting guideline use indicating “quality” of work.
CONCLUSION: Barriers to using intervention reporting guidelines are largely modifiable and could be addressed by journals mandating their use, and educational initiatives.Permalink : https://bibliotheque.helb-prigogine.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id= [article]Exemplaires
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