Lambert_2017 - Residential greenness and allergic respiratory diseases in children and adolescents – A systematic review and meta-analysis

Basic Article Info:

Article key Lambert_2017
Title Residential greenness and allergic respiratory diseases in children and adolescents – A systematic review and meta-analysis
Year 2017
Review type meta-analysis
Main topic Relationship between residential greenness and allergic respiratory diseases in children
Subjects area(s) Environment and nature, Health and well-being
Built environment scale Urban area / Urban system
Application(s) Implementation, Evaluation
Geographically focused no
Prisma diagram used yes
Study focus start not mentioned
Study focus end 2017
Search string not provided
No. of original sources 11
Synthesis method qualitative + quantitative
Quantitative map included no
Conflict of interest "Michael Abramson holds investigator initiated research grants from Pfizer and Boehringer-Ingelheim for unrelated research. He has also received assistance with conference attendance from Sanofi. All other authors report no conflict of interest."
Comments

 

Details about searches

Search sources
Search source name Source type Comments Weblink
Scopus Online Database Scopus is the world's largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed research literature. With over 22,000 titles from more than 5,000 international publishers. https://www.scopus.com/search/form.uri?display=basic
Web of Sciences Online Database Web of Science is an online subscription-based scientific citation indexing service originally produced by the Institute for Scientific Information, now maintained by Clarivate Analytics, that provides a comprehensive citation search. https://apps.webofknowledge.com
Medline Online Database MEDLINE® contains journal citations and abstracts for biomedical literature from around the world. PubMed® provides free access to MEDLINE and links to full text articles when possible. https://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/pmresources.html
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CINAHL Online Database The authoritative resource for nursing and allied health professionals, students, educators and researchers. This database provides indexing for 2,960 journals from the fields of nursing and allied health. The database contains more than 2,000,000 records dating back to 1981.shed by Lippincott & Wilkins. http://www.southside.edu/content/cinal-online-version-cumulative-index-nursing-allied-health-literature
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Google Scholar Online Database Google Scholar is a freely accessible web search engine that indexes the full text or metadata of scholarly literature across an array of publishing formats and disciplines. Released in beta in November 2004, the Google Scholar index includes most peer-reviewed online academic journals and books, conference papers, theses and dissertations, preprints, abstracts, technical reports, and other scholarly literature, including court opinions and patents. https://scholar.google.com.au/
Keywords used in search Allergic respiratory disease, children, Environment, greenness, Residential

 

Authorship

Authors
Name Email Organisation Address Country
Katrina Lambert School of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University Melbourne Australia
Gayan Bowatte Allergy and Lung Health Unit, Centre for Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia
Rachel Tham Allergy and Lung Health Unit, Centre for Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia
Caroline J Lodge Allergy and Lung Health Unit, Centre for Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia
Luke Anthony Prendergast Department of Mathematics and Statistics, La Trobe University Melbourne Australia
Joachim Heinrich Institute and Outpatient Clinic for Occupational, Social and Environmental Medicine, Clinical Center, Ludwig Maximilians University, Comprehensive Pneumology Centre Munich, German Centre for Lung Research Munich Germany
M J Abramson School of Public Health&Preventive Medicine, Monash University Melbourne Australia
Shyamali Chandrika Dharmage Allergy and Lung Health Unit, Centre for Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia
Bircan Erbas* b.erbas@latrobe.edu.au School of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University Melbourne Australia

 

Funding

Funding sources
Funding source Address Country Funded year Comments
La Trobe University Ph.D. Postgraduate Scholarship Australia
Building Healthy Communities top-up scholarship Australia
National Health&Medical Research Council of Australia Australia GNT1055754
National Health&Medical Research Council (NHMRC ID1020238) Research Training Program Scholarship Australia NHMRC ID1020238
Air quality&health Research and evaluation (NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence) top-up scholarship Australia


Article publication information:

Article type Journal article
Article category Text
Geographical scale International
Language English
Chapter or part
Conference date
Conference venue
Published date 2017-08-10
Edition
Issue
Journal Environmental Research
Pagination 212-221
Peer reviewed yes
Publication place
Publisher Elsevier Inc.
School / department or centre
Series volume no.
Series title
Series sort no.
Volume 159
Website owner
Copyrights of article Elsevier Ltd.
Licences of article Open Access:
Identifiers of article DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2017.08.002, ISSN: 00139351, PMID: 28803150


Quality assessment

Quality measure Details Score Comments
QA question 1 Are the research questions and inclusion criteria for the review clearly delineated? 1 = “Yes” = Who (Population), What (Intervention, Comparator group, Outcome), Where and When described. general but concrete description of aims
QA question 2 Did the report of the review contain an explicit statement that the review methods were established prior to the conduct of the review and did the report justify any significant deviations from the protocol? 0 = ”No” = research question and inclusion criteria not outlined in detail. not provided
QA question 3 Did the review authors explain their selection of the study designs for inclusion in the review? 0.5 = “Can’t answer / not sure / partially” =Cannot decide between “yes” and “no”, basing on the information provided in the paper. cohort, case-control, cross-sectional and ecological studies
QA question 4 Did the review authors use a comprehensive literature search strategy? 0.5 = “Can’t answer / not sure / partially” = searched at least 2 databases (relevant to research question), provided key word and/or general search strategy, justified publication restrictions (e.g., language). 9 databases, citations
QA question 5 Did the review authors perform study selection in duplicate? 1 = “Yes” = either ONE of the following: at least two reviewers independently agreed on selection of eligible studies and achieved consensus on which studies to include OR two reviewers selected a sample of eligible studies and achieved good agreement (at least 80%), with the remainder selected by one reviewer. two independent reviewers
QA question 6 Did the review authors perform data extraction in duplicate? 1 = “Yes” = either ONE of the following: at least two reviewers achieved consensus on which data to extract from included studies OR two reviewers extracted data from a sample of eligible studies and achieved good agreement (at least 8 %), with the remainder extracted by one reviewer. two independent reviewers
QA question 7 Did the review authors provide a list of excluded studies and justify the exclusions? 0 =”No” = No list of studies excluded at a full-text stage. not provided
QA question 8 Did the review authors describe the included studies in adequate detail? 1 = “Yes” = ALL the following: Who (Population), What (Intervention, Comparator group, Outcome), Where and When described in detail. Table 1
QA question 9 Did the review authors use a satisfactory technique for assessing the risk of bias (RoB) in individual studies that were included in the review? 1 = “Yes” = specifically mentions RoB assessment of individual included studies. GRADE
QA question 10 Did the review authors report on the sources of funding for the studies included in the review? 0 =”No” = no report of the sources of funding for individual studies included in the review. not provided
QA question 11 If meta-analysis was performed did the review authors use appropriate methods for statistical combination of results? 1 = “Yes” = The authors justified combining the data in a meta-analysis AND they used an appropriate technique to combine study results and adjusted for heterogeneity if present AND investigated the causes of any heterogeneity or adjusted for heterogeneity or confounding if present. random-effects meta-analysis
QA question 12 If meta-analysis was performed, did the review authors assess the potential impact of RoB in individual studies on the results of the meta-analysis or other evidence synthesis? 0 =”No” = no assessment of the potential impact of RoB. not provided
QA question 13 Did the review authors account for RoB in individual studies when interpreting/ discussing the results of the review? 0 =”No” = no discussion of the potential impact of RoB in individual studies. not provided
QA question 14 Did the review authors provide a satisfactory explanation for, and discussion of, any heterogeneity observed in the results of the review? 1 = “Yes” = There was no significant heterogeneity in the results OR if heterogeneity was present the authors performed an investigation of sources of any heterogeneity in the results and discussed the impact of this on the results of the review. meta-regressions and discussion
QA question 15 If they performed quantitative synthesis did the review authors carry out an adequate investigation of publication bias (small study bias) and discuss its likely impact on the results of the review? 0.5 = “Can’t answer / not sure / partially” = more than one online source but no supplementary sources or one online source and one supplementary source. Cannot decide between “yes” and “no”, basing on the information provided in the paper. funnel plots (Appendix)
QA question 16 Did the review authors report any potential sources of conflict of interest, including any funding they received for conducting the review? 1 = “Yes” = The authors reported no competing interests OR the authors described their funding sources and how they managed potential conflicts of interest. Funding sources disclosed in "Acknowledgemets"
Quality index Overall rating (Quality Index) assigned to each SR, highlighting whether major concerns arose during quality assessment that may affect overall conclusions of a SR: A = Minimal flaws; B = Some flaws; C = Major flaws in many aspects of the review. B no protocol, some details missing, some bias might be present
Suggested review type Actual review type:systematic map, systematic review, rapid review, scoping review, narrative review, etc. meta-analysis N/A
Risk of bias level How likely are the main conclusions of the review to be biased? Basing on review type and quality index and quality_index_comment assign: high moderate or low risk? medium no protocol; some search details missing;