

If you do decide to conduct a systematic review, please register your protocol. The SPARK Tool to prioritise questions for systematic reviews in health policy and systems research can help you decide if a systematic review is appropriate and needed. Here is a decision tree ( source) to help you decide is a systematic, or other type or review, is appropriate. Systematic Reviews should address a clearly formulated, relatively narrowly focused question and use systematic and explicit methods to identify, select, and assess relevant research.īefore you embark on a systematic review, please understand that this could easily be a one year or more project. ("social marketing" OR "audience segmentation")


"social marketing" site: (for a specific site search) "social marketing" (for a domain search) Site: to specify a particular site or domain:.Google and other search engines can be useful for finding grey literature. Each guide consists of annotated lists of organizations, agencies, databases, statistical/data sources, and publications. The Library's Public Health Subject Guides lists guides by topic. They are often produced by government entities, research institutions, or NGOs/IGOs. Grey Literature generally refers to publications not produced by commercial publishers, including reports (pre-prints, preliminary progress and advanced reports, technical reports, market research reports, etc.), theses, conference proceedings, and other documents.
