{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Crowdsourcing trainees in a living systematic review provided valuable experiential learning opportunities: a mixed-methods study. {Author}: Lee C;Thomas M;Ejaredar M;Kassam A;Whittle SL;Buchbinder R;Tugwell P;Wells G;Pardo JP;Hazlewood GS; {Journal}: J Clin Epidemiol {Volume}: 147 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 07 2022 {Factor}: 7.407 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2022.03.019 {Abstract}: To understand trainee experiences of participating in a living systematic review (LSR) for rheumatoid arthritis and the potential benefits in terms of experiential evidence-based medicine (EBM) education.
We conducted a mixed-methods study with trainees who participated in the LSR and who were recruited broadly from training programs in two countries. Trainees received task-specific training and completed one or more tasks in the review: assessing article eligibility, data extraction, and quality assessment. Trainees completed a survey followed by a one-on-one interview. Data were triangulated to produce broad themes.
Twenty one trainees, most of whom had a little prior experience with systematic reviews, reported a positive overall experience. Key benefits included learning opportunities, task segmentation (ability to focus on a single task, as opposed to an entire review), working in a supportive environment, international collaboration, and incentives such as authorship or acknowledgment. Trainees reported improvement in their competency as a Scholar, Collaborator, Leader, and Medical Expert. Challenges included communication and technical difficulties and appropriate matching of tasks to trainee skillsets.
Participating in an LSR provided benefits to a wide range of trainees and may provide an opportunity for experiential EBM training, while helping LSR sustainability.