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Scoping Reviews in Social Work

Types of Reviews

Reviews can have different structures and goals. The primary forms of reviews in our discipline are literature reviews and systematic reviews:

literature review provides a reader with a critical overview of the sources relevant to a specific research subject, question, or idea. In writing a literature review, it is important to contextualize each resource, evaluate the content, and provide a critical analysis of the strengths, contributions, and issues. A guide to writing literature reviews is available here.

scoping review is a more detailed review than a literature review using basic inclusion and exclusion criteria. We are providing a summary of scholarship related to a research topic or question, without providing a clinical analysis that a more rigorous scoping review tends to provide. A guide to writing scoping reviews is available here. 

systematic review uses a specific methodology to identify all relevant studies on a specific topic and then select appropriate studies based on very specific criteria for inclusion/exclusion. By having transparent frameworks, systematic reviews seek to be verifiable and reproducible. Systematic reviews in the discipline can often include statistical analysis techniques. A guide to writing systematic reviews is available here. 

A comprehensive list of all the types of reviews you might encounter as a social science researcher and their search strategies is available here.

Literature Review vs. Systematic Review

The following chart can guide you through deciding if a literature review, scoping review, or systematic review is right for you. 

  Literature Review Scoping Review Systematic Review
Definition
  • Can be a broad or topic of research
  • Collect and interpret studies
  • Qualitatively summarizes evidence on a topic using informal or subjective methods
  • Can be a broad or focused research question
  • Overview of primary research
  • Identifies the existing evidence relating to a topic without providing a clinical answer
  • Very focused research question
  • High-level overview of primary research
  • Identifies, selects, synthesizes, and appraises all high quality research evidence relevant to the research question
Goals
  • Provide a summary or overview of a topic
  • Crafts a detailed overview of the existing research on a topic
  • Answer a focused clinical question
  • Eliminate all bias
Question
  • Can be a generated topic or a specific question
  • Can be narrow to broad
  • Clearly defined and answerable clinical question
  • PICO (Patient, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome) framework often used as a guide 
Number of Authors
  • One or more
  • One or more
  • At least two, ideally three
  • Multiple authors aims to eliminate bias
Timeline
  • Days to months
  • Weeks to months
  • Months to years
Requirements
  • Demonstrate foundational understanding of topic
  • Perform search of at least one database
  • Demonstrate understanding of big conversations surrounding your research topic
  • Perform search of at least one database
  • Demonstrate advanced knowledge of topic
  • Perform searches of all relevant databases
  • Statistical analysis (for meta-analysis)
Value
  • Provides summary literature on a topic
  • Provides an understanding of existing scholarship and gaps surrounding a research question
  • Connects practitioners to high-quality evidence
  • Supports evidence-based practice.

Adopted and reformatted for social science analysis purposes from: Kysh, Lynn (2013): Difference between a systematic review and a literature review. Figshare. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.766364.v1

A comprehensive list of all the types of reviews you might encounter as a social science researcher and their search strategies is available here.

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