How to focus your question
Before you begin searching for literature to support your review, you need to carefully focus and define your research question.
It's important to be as specific as possible when defining your research question in order to develop an effective search strategy to find all relevant papers that match your review question. This is a very important aspect of creating a systematic review, as your search needs to be as comprehensive as possible in order to create a high quality, unbiased review.
The best way to initially start planning your search is to break up your topic into its main concepts or ideas, and then develop a list of keywords related to each of your concepts in advance of searching your databases.
Planning with P I C O S- quantitative studies
To help you focus your question for quantitative research topics and begin planning your search strategy, use frameworks such as P I C O S.
P I C O S, a variation of the PICO tool described by Richardson, W et al in 1995, is explained below:
It is not essential for each of these elements to appear in your search strategy but all research questions should at the minimum have a population group and intervention of interest. In many cases the outcomes are not included as part of the search strategy itself, but rather these will act as a guide when you are reviewing papers to include and exclude to define your final set of papers that will form the basis of your review.
Click here for a Cochrane presentation for more detailed information on PICOS.
Planning with S P I D E R- qualitative studies
For qualitative studies, the framework S P I D E R , first described by Cook, A, Smith, D and Booth, A (2012) and may work better than P I C O S
As with P I C O S, it is not essential for each of these S PI D E R elements to appear in your search strategy.
Why spend time planning?
If you do not allot time to focus your question and plan your search strategy, your review may suffer from the following:
For more additional guidance on how to focus your question, read this article by Andrew Booth from ScHARR.
Search plan templates, worked examples and information about other planning frameworks are available at the bottom of this page.
Example of an unfocused question:
"I need information on diabetes and patient education?"
Example of a more focused question:
”Is patient education effective in improving blood sugar control
in teenage diabetics?”
Below is a PICOS framework for the question:
”Is patient education effective in improving blood sugar control
in teenage diabetics?”
Below is a SPIDER framework for the question:
"What are the attitudes of elderly people with stroke towards the daily use of assistive devices and technologies?"
Alternatives to P I C O S and S P I D E R
P E S T E L :
S P I C E :
E C L I P S [management and service related issues] :
M I P [medical ethics review] :