Children’s, parents’ and other stakeholders’ perspectives on early dietary self-management to delay disease progression of chronic disease in children: a protocol for a mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis

Abstract Background Chronic disease of childhood may be delayed by early dietary intervention. The purpose of this systematic review is to provide decision-makers with a perspective on the role of early dietary intervention, as a form of self-management, to delay disease progression in children with...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pearl Pugh, Pippa Hemingway, Martin Christian, Gina Higginbottom
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-01-01
Series:Systematic Reviews
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-017-0671-8
id doaj-a1027ab01e494994884d5ad842cfd355
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a1027ab01e494994884d5ad842cfd3552020-11-24T22:01:24ZengBMCSystematic Reviews2046-40532018-01-017111010.1186/s13643-017-0671-8Children’s, parents’ and other stakeholders’ perspectives on early dietary self-management to delay disease progression of chronic disease in children: a protocol for a mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesisPearl Pugh0Pippa Hemingway1Martin Christian2Gina Higginbottom3School of Health Sciences, University of NottinghamSchool of Health Sciences, University of NottinghamNottingham Children’s Hospital, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS TrustSchool of Health Sciences, University of NottinghamAbstract Background Chronic disease of childhood may be delayed by early dietary intervention. The purpose of this systematic review is to provide decision-makers with a perspective on the role of early dietary intervention, as a form of self-management, to delay disease progression in children with early chronic disease, as described by children, parents and other stakeholders. Methods The study will systematically review empirical research (qualitative, quantitative and mixed method designs), including grey literature, using a narrative synthesis. A four-stage search process will be conducted involving a scoping search, the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) Patient Issues search filter on MEDLINE, the search of seven databases using a chronic disease and chronic kidney disease (CKD) search strategy, and hand searching the reference lists of identified papers for additional studies. All studies retrieved during the search process will undergo a screening and selection process against the inclusion/exclusion criteria. Methodological quality of relevant studies will be assessed using a validated Mixed Studies Review scoring system, before inclusion in the review. Relevant grey literature will be assessed for methodological quality and relative importance using McGrath et al.’s framework and the Academy Health advisory committee categories, respectively. Data extraction will be guided by the Centre for Review and Dissemination guidance and Popay et al.’s work. The narrative synthesis of the findings will use elements of Popay et al.’s methodology of narrative synthesis, applying recognised tools for each of the four elements: (1) developing a theory of how the intervention works, why and for whom; (2) developing a preliminary synthesis of findings of included studies; (3) exploring relationships in the data; and (4) assessing the robustness of the synthesis. Discussion This mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis seeks to elucidate the gaps in current knowledge and generate a fresh explanation of research findings on early dietary self-management in chronic disease, with particular application to CKD, from the stakeholders’ perspective. The review will provide an important platform to inform future research, identifying the facilitators and barriers to implementing early dietary interventions. Ultimately, the review will contribute vital information to inform future improvements in chronic disease. The lead author has a particular interest in CKD paediatric service delivery. Systematic review registration The review has been registered with PROSPERO (CRD42017078130).http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-017-0671-8Self-managementChronic diseaseChronic kidney diseaseDietPaediatricStakeholders
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pearl Pugh
Pippa Hemingway
Martin Christian
Gina Higginbottom
spellingShingle Pearl Pugh
Pippa Hemingway
Martin Christian
Gina Higginbottom
Children’s, parents’ and other stakeholders’ perspectives on early dietary self-management to delay disease progression of chronic disease in children: a protocol for a mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis
Systematic Reviews
Self-management
Chronic disease
Chronic kidney disease
Diet
Paediatric
Stakeholders
author_facet Pearl Pugh
Pippa Hemingway
Martin Christian
Gina Higginbottom
author_sort Pearl Pugh
title Children’s, parents’ and other stakeholders’ perspectives on early dietary self-management to delay disease progression of chronic disease in children: a protocol for a mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis
title_short Children’s, parents’ and other stakeholders’ perspectives on early dietary self-management to delay disease progression of chronic disease in children: a protocol for a mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis
title_full Children’s, parents’ and other stakeholders’ perspectives on early dietary self-management to delay disease progression of chronic disease in children: a protocol for a mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis
title_fullStr Children’s, parents’ and other stakeholders’ perspectives on early dietary self-management to delay disease progression of chronic disease in children: a protocol for a mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Children’s, parents’ and other stakeholders’ perspectives on early dietary self-management to delay disease progression of chronic disease in children: a protocol for a mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis
title_sort children’s, parents’ and other stakeholders’ perspectives on early dietary self-management to delay disease progression of chronic disease in children: a protocol for a mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis
publisher BMC
series Systematic Reviews
issn 2046-4053
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Abstract Background Chronic disease of childhood may be delayed by early dietary intervention. The purpose of this systematic review is to provide decision-makers with a perspective on the role of early dietary intervention, as a form of self-management, to delay disease progression in children with early chronic disease, as described by children, parents and other stakeholders. Methods The study will systematically review empirical research (qualitative, quantitative and mixed method designs), including grey literature, using a narrative synthesis. A four-stage search process will be conducted involving a scoping search, the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) Patient Issues search filter on MEDLINE, the search of seven databases using a chronic disease and chronic kidney disease (CKD) search strategy, and hand searching the reference lists of identified papers for additional studies. All studies retrieved during the search process will undergo a screening and selection process against the inclusion/exclusion criteria. Methodological quality of relevant studies will be assessed using a validated Mixed Studies Review scoring system, before inclusion in the review. Relevant grey literature will be assessed for methodological quality and relative importance using McGrath et al.’s framework and the Academy Health advisory committee categories, respectively. Data extraction will be guided by the Centre for Review and Dissemination guidance and Popay et al.’s work. The narrative synthesis of the findings will use elements of Popay et al.’s methodology of narrative synthesis, applying recognised tools for each of the four elements: (1) developing a theory of how the intervention works, why and for whom; (2) developing a preliminary synthesis of findings of included studies; (3) exploring relationships in the data; and (4) assessing the robustness of the synthesis. Discussion This mixed studies systematic review with a narrative synthesis seeks to elucidate the gaps in current knowledge and generate a fresh explanation of research findings on early dietary self-management in chronic disease, with particular application to CKD, from the stakeholders’ perspective. The review will provide an important platform to inform future research, identifying the facilitators and barriers to implementing early dietary interventions. Ultimately, the review will contribute vital information to inform future improvements in chronic disease. The lead author has a particular interest in CKD paediatric service delivery. Systematic review registration The review has been registered with PROSPERO (CRD42017078130).
topic Self-management
Chronic disease
Chronic kidney disease
Diet
Paediatric
Stakeholders
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-017-0671-8
work_keys_str_mv AT pearlpugh childrensparentsandotherstakeholdersperspectivesonearlydietaryselfmanagementtodelaydiseaseprogressionofchronicdiseaseinchildrenaprotocolforamixedstudiessystematicreviewwithanarrativesynthesis
AT pippahemingway childrensparentsandotherstakeholdersperspectivesonearlydietaryselfmanagementtodelaydiseaseprogressionofchronicdiseaseinchildrenaprotocolforamixedstudiessystematicreviewwithanarrativesynthesis
AT martinchristian childrensparentsandotherstakeholdersperspectivesonearlydietaryselfmanagementtodelaydiseaseprogressionofchronicdiseaseinchildrenaprotocolforamixedstudiessystematicreviewwithanarrativesynthesis
AT ginahigginbottom childrensparentsandotherstakeholdersperspectivesonearlydietaryselfmanagementtodelaydiseaseprogressionofchronicdiseaseinchildrenaprotocolforamixedstudiessystematicreviewwithanarrativesynthesis
_version_ 1725839812721639424