Series: Clinical Epidemiology in South Africa. Paper 3: Logic models help make sense of complexity in systematic reviews and health technology assessments

J Clin Epidemiol. 2017 Mar:83:37-47. doi: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2016.06.012. Epub 2016 Aug 3.

Abstract

Objective: To describe the development and application of logic model templates for systematic reviews and health technology assessments (HTAs) of complex interventions.

Study design and setting: This study demonstrates the development of a method to conceptualize complexity and make underlying assumptions transparent. Examples from systematic reviews with specific relevance to Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and other low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) illustrate its usefulness.

Results: Two distinct templates are presented: the system-based logic model, describing the system in which the interaction between participants, intervention, and context takes place; and the process-orientated logic model, which displays the processes and causal pathways that lead from the intervention to multiple outcomes.

Conclusion: Logic models can help authors of systematic reviews and HTAs to explicitly address and make sense of complexity, adding value by achieving a better understanding of the interactions between the intervention, its implementation, and its multiple outcomes among a given population and context. They thus have the potential to help build systematic review capacity-in SSA and other LMICs-at an individual level, by equipping authors with a tool that facilitates the review process; and at a system-level, by improving communication between producers and potential users of research evidence.

Keywords: Africa; Analytical framework; Complexity; Conceptual framework; Evidence synthesis; Systems-based thinking.

MeSH terms

  • Evidence-Based Medicine / methods
  • Evidence-Based Medicine / standards
  • Humans
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Review Literature as Topic*
  • South Africa
  • Technology Assessment, Biomedical*