~~TOC~~
Criteria | Yes | No | Unclear | Comments |
——— | —– | —- | ——— | ———- |
1. Is the review question clearly and explicitly stated? | ||||
2. Were the inclusion criteria appropriate for the review question? | ||||
3. Was the search strategy appropriate? | ||||
4. Were the sources and resources used to search for studies adequate? | ||||
5. Were the criteria for appraising studies appropriate? | ||||
6. Was critical appraisal conducted by two or more reviewers independently? | ||||
7. Were there methods to minimize errors in data extraction? | ||||
8. Were the methods used to combine studies appropriate? | ||||
9. Was the likelihood of publication bias assessed? | ||||
10. Were recommendations for policy and/or practice supported by the reported data? | ||||
11. Were the specific directives for new research appropriate? |
Is it clearly defined, including PICO elements where appropriate?
Are population, intervention, comparator, and outcomes defined and justified?
Describe adequacy, transparency, and reproducibility of the search strategy.
Databases, grey literature, hand-searching? Were they comprehensive?
Were tools/methods to assess study quality valid and appropriate?
Were two or more reviewers involved independently? Describe any consensus method.
Were processes in place to ensure data extraction reliability?
Narrative/meta-analysis? Were methods appropriate to the data types?
Was it assessed (e.g., funnel plots, Egger’s test)?
Were they logically supported by the findings?
Were gaps identified and relevant proposals for future research made?
This checklist is designed to assess the methodological quality and reporting of individual case reports, following the Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines.
Were the patient’s demographic characteristics clearly described?
Was the patient’s history clearly described and presented as a timeline?
Was the current clinical condition of the patient on presentation clearly described?
Were diagnostic tests or assessment methods and the results clearly described?
Was the intervention(s) or treatment procedure(s) clearly described?
Was the post-intervention clinical condition clearly described?
Were adverse events (harms) or unanticipated events identified and described?
Does the case report provide takeaway lessons or clinical insights?
Scoring Recommendation: You may consider a case report of high quality if most of the items (typically ≥6/8) are marked as adequately addressed.
Source: Joanna Briggs Institute – [https://jbi.global/critical-appraisal-tools](https://jbi.global/critical-appraisal-tools)