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Weekly updates of national living evidence-based guidelines: Methods for the Australian Living Guidelines for Care of People with COVID-19

Authors :
Rakibul M. Islam
Steve McDonald
Henriette Edemann Callesen
Britta Tendal
Julian Elliott
Joshua P. Vogel
Tanya Millard
Heath White
Melissa Murano
Samantha Chakraborty
David Fraile Navarro
Miranda Cumpston
Saskia Cheyne
Sarah Norris
Tari Turner
Karin Leder
Source :
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background and Objectives The Australian National COVID-19 Clinical Evidence Taskforce is a consortium of 31 Australian health professional organisations developing living, evidence-based guidelines for care of people with COVID-19, which are updated weekly. This article describes the methods used to develop and maintain the guidelines. Methods The guidelines use the GRADE methods and are designed to meet Australian NHMRC standards. Each week, new evidence is reviewed, current recommendations are revised, and new recommendations made. These are published in MAGIC and disseminated through traditional and social media. Relevant new questions to be addressed are continually sought from stakeholders and practitioners. For prioritized questions, the evidence is actively monitored and updated. Evidence surveillance combines horizon scans and targeted searches. An evidence team appraises and synthesizes evidence and prepares evidence-to-decision frameworks to inform development of recommendations. A guidelines leadership group oversees the development of recommendations by multidisciplinary guidelines panels and is advised by a consumer panel. Results : The Taskforce formed in March 2020, and the first recommendations were published 2 weeks later. The guidelines have been revised and republished on a weekly basis for 24 weeks, and as of October 2020, contain over 90 treatment recommendations, suggesting that living methods are feasible in this context. Conclusions The Australian guidelines for care of people with COVID-19 provide an example of the feasibility of living guidelines and an opportunity to test and improve living evidence methods.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....312b715c932f4e6b072ce8f7d0a8a3ba