• Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jul 2020

    Survey research in anesthesiology: a field guide to interpretation.

    • Hedwig Schroeck, Kwame Wiredu, Tae Wuk Ko, David Record, and Brenda Sirovich.
    • Anesthesiology, Dartmouth College Geisel School of Medicine, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA hedwig.schroeck@dartmouth.edu.
    • Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2020 Jul 1; 45 (7): 544-551.

    BackgroundSurvey research, indispensable for assessing subjective outcomes in anesthesiology, can nonetheless be challenging to undertake and interpret.ObjectiveTo present a user-friendly guide for the appraisal of survey-derived evidence, and to apply it to published survey research in the anesthesia literature.MethodsSynthesizing published expert guidance regarding methodology and reporting, we discuss five essential criteria (with subcomponents) for evaluating survey research: (1) relevance of survey outcome to research objective, (2) trustworthiness of the instrument (testing/validation, availability), (3) collecting information well (sampling, administration), (4) representativeness (response rate), and (5) guidance towards interpretation of survey findings (generalizability, interpretation of numerical outcomes). These criteria were subsequently applied by two independent assessors to original research articles reporting survey findings, published in the five highest impact general anesthesia journals ('Anaesthesia', 'Anesthesia & Analgesia', 'Anesthesiology', 'British Journal of Anaesthesia' and 'European Journal of Anaesthesiology') between July 01, 2016, and December 31, 2017, which were identified using a prespecified PubMed search strategy.ResultsAmong 1107 original articles published, we identified 97 reporting survey research either employing novel survey instruments (58%), established surveys (30%), or sets of single-item scores (12%). The extent to which reader-oriented benchmarks were achieved varied by component and between survey types. Results were particularly mixed for validation (mentioned for 41% of novel and 86% of established surveys) and discussion of generalizability (59% of novel survey reports, 45% of established surveys, and 17% of sets of single-item scores).ConclusionSurvey research is not uncommon in anesthesiology, frequently employs novel survey instruments, and demonstrates mixed results in terms of transparency and interpretability. We provide readers with a practical framework for critical interpretation of survey-derived outcomes.© American Society of Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine 2020. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

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