The development of IN SUM: a database of systematic reviews on effects of child mental health and welfare interventions

ID: 

203

Session: 

Poster session 2

Date: 

Monday 17 September 2018 - 12:30 to 14:00

All authors in correct order:

Horseng Ludvigsen K1, Eidet LM1, Brynhildur A1, Sølvi B1, Mari E1, Karianne H1, Hege K1
1 Regional Centre for Child and Adolescent Mental Health Eastern and Southern Norway, Norway
Presenting author and contact person

Presenting author:

Lise Mette Eidet

Contact person:

Abstract text
Background:
Children and youth with mental health issues is a vulnerable group in demand of evidence-based treatments, but summarized evidence about the effects of treatments for this patient group is not readily available to patients or practitioners.

Objectives:
To describe the development of a database of systematic reviews on the effects of child mental health and welfare interventions.

Methods:
We searched the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Campbell Library, DARE (Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects), PsycINFO, MEDLINE, Embase, Evidence Based Mental Health and Web of Science. We identified all relevant systematic reviews concerning children (<18 years of age) published from 2000 until the present, investigating the effect of any intervention concerning child mental health or child welfare.

IN SUM is continuously updated every month. All identified titles/abstracts are screened independently by two reviewers following predetermined inclusion criteria (the DARE criteria). Following inclusion, references are coded and published. All systematic reviews published in the database are quality appraised using the AMSTAR-checklist.

The database has gone through extensive user-testing including members of the target audience. Following this feedback a launch of a new version of the database is planned for 2019.

Results:
The database currently includes 1135 systematic reviews. Review abstracts made available through IN SUM are accessible for all, free of charge. In the new version of the database you will be able to search for relevant reviews using a complex filtering system using a set of categories including age group, topic and type of intervention.

Conclusions:
We believe that by providing easy access to relevant and quality appraised systematic reviews, IN SUM has the potential of becoming a valuable source for practitioners and researchers in our field.

Patient or healthcare consumer involvement:
IN SUM was developed with the objective of providing the public and practitioners with reliable summarized evidence of prevention and treatment of mental illness in children and youth. This will enable shared decision making and informed treatment choices.

Attachments: 

Relevance to patients and consumers: 

To our knowledge there is no database available that gathers all systematic reviews on effect of interventions relevant for child welfare and child mental health in one place. IN SUM is developed with the objective to provide the public and practitioners with reliable summarized evidence of prevention and treatment of mental illness in children and youth. This will enable shared decision making and informed treatment choices.