Tool to assess risk of bias in studies estimating the prevalence of mental health disorders (RoB-PrevMH)

Author:

Tonia ThomyORCID,Buitrago-Garcia DianaORCID,Peter Natalie LuiseORCID,Mesa-Vieira CristinaORCID,Li Tianjing,Furukawa Toshi AORCID,Cipriani AndreaORCID,Leucht StefanORCID,Low NicolaORCID,Salanti GeorgiaORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveThere is no standard tool for assessing risk of bias (RoB) in prevalence studies. For the purposes of a living systematic review during the COVID-19 pandemic, we developed a tool to evaluate RoB in studies measuring the prevalence of mental health disorders (RoB-PrevMH) and tested inter-rater reliability.MethodsWe decided on items and signalling questions to include in RoB-PrevMH through iterative discussions. We tested the reliability of assessments by different users with two sets of prevalence studies. The first set included a random sample of 50 studies from our living systematic review. The second set included 33 studies from a systematic review of the prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorders, major depression and generalised anxiety disorder. We assessed the inter-rater agreement by calculating the proportion of agreement and Kappa statistic for each item.ResultsRoB-PrevMH consists of three items that address selection bias and information bias. Introductory and signalling questions guide the application of the tool to the review question. The inter-rater agreement for the three items was 83%, 90% and 93%. The weighted kappa scores were 0.63 (95% CI 0.54 to 0.73), 0.71 (95% CI 0.67 to 0.85) and 0.32 (95% CI −0.04 to 0.63), respectively.ConclusionsRoB-PrevMH is a brief, user-friendly and adaptable tool for assessing RoB in studies on prevalence of mental health disorders. Initial results for inter-rater agreement were fair to substantial. The tool’s validity, reliability and applicability should be assessed in future projects.

Funder

NIHR Research Professorship

NIHR Oxford and Thames Valley Applied Research Collaboration

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Oxford Cognitive Health Clinical Research Facility

National Eye Institute

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

SSPH+ Global PhD Fellowship Programme in Public Health Sciences of the Swiss School of Public Health

Swiss government excellence scholarship

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

NIHR Oxford Health Biomedical Research Centre

Publisher

BMJ

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