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The Cochrane Collaboration.

R J P M Scholten1, M Clarke, J Hetherington

  • 1The Dutch Cochrane Centre, J1B-108, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. cochrane@amc.uva.nl

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
|July 30, 2005
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Establishing a Cochrane Diet and Nutrition (Sub)Field will enhance systematic reviews on nutritional interventions. This initiative addresses the current gap in the Cochrane Collaboration, improving health decisions.

Area of Science:

  • Health Sciences
  • Evidence-Based Medicine
  • Nutrition Science

Background:

  • The Cochrane Collaboration produces systematic reviews to inform health-care decisions.
  • Existing review groups focus on health problems, with nutrition being underrepresented.
  • Nutrition is crucial for daily health and requires robust evidence synthesis.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To highlight the need for a dedicated Cochrane Diet and Nutrition (Sub)Field.
  • To advocate for increased systematic reviews of nutritional interventions.
  • To address methodological challenges in nutritional research synthesis.

Main Methods:

  • The abstract discusses the structure and function of the Cochrane Collaboration.
  • It identifies the gap in systematic reviews concerning nutrition.

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  • It proposes the establishment of a specialized (Sub)Field.
  • Main Results:

    • Nutrition is currently insufficiently addressed within the Cochrane Collaboration.
    • A dedicated Diet and Nutrition (Sub)Field is proposed to fill this gap.
    • This (Sub)Field will facilitate the preparation of systematic reviews on nutritional interventions.

    Conclusions:

    • A Cochrane Diet and Nutrition (Sub)Field is essential for advancing evidence-based nutrition.
    • It will support the development of high-quality systematic reviews on nutritional interventions.
    • This will ultimately improve health-care decisions related to diet and nutrition.