Tag

Systematic Reviews

All articles tagged with #systematic reviews

AI isn’t ready to take over medical literature reviews
world3 hours ago

AI isn’t ready to take over medical literature reviews

A Nature World View piece argues that AI tools, while being explored to speed up health-related literature reviews, are not yet reliable enough to replace human experts. AI can replicate steps like study identification, data extraction, and writing, but meaningful review questions, relevance assessment, and interpretation require human judgment. AI models can hallucinate and lack the necessary context, and many tools are private/black-box, raising independence and bias concerns. Training times are long and current workflows often take longer than manual reviews. The author advocates building cooperative human–AI systems rather than generating entire reviews, to safeguard accuracy and policy relevance.

Osteoarthritis Exercise Benefits Are Smaller and Shorter-Lasting, Study Finds
health3 months ago

Osteoarthritis Exercise Benefits Are Smaller and Shorter-Lasting, Study Finds

A large umbrella review and data analysis find that exercise therapy for osteoarthritis provides only small, short‑term reductions in pain and function—often comparable to doing nothing in some comparisons—challenging the idea of exercise as a universal first‑line treatment. Effects are smallest for hip and hand OA and diminish further in longer-term or larger studies. While exercise offers other health benefits and may suit some patients, care should be personalized with shared decision‑making, considering alternatives and individual goals rather than universally promoting exercise as the sole first option.

Questions Arise Over Scientific Reviews of Exercise-Based Addiction Interventions
health3 years ago

Questions Arise Over Scientific Reviews of Exercise-Based Addiction Interventions

A new scientific review argues that the wide number of methodological concerns and knowledge gaps in the literature prevents the development of clinical recommendations for exercise-based interventions for substance abuse populations. The researchers found several methodological concerns and gaps in knowledge, and the methodological quality of the systematic reviews was generally judged to be critically low. The researchers emphasized the need for future research to focus on improving the quality of systematic reviews and increasing the number of high-quality clinical trials.