The Cochrane reviews take the format of full-length methodological studies. Cochrane researchers will perform searches of medical and health databases including
MEDLINE/
PubMed,
EMBASE,
PsycINFO,
CINAHL, etc.; a continually updated database of trials called the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL); hand searching, where researchers look through entire libraries of
scientific journals by hand and; reference checking of obtained articles in order to identify additional studies that are relevant to the question they are attempting to answer. The quality of each study is carefully assessed using predefined criteria and evidence of weak methodology or the possibility that a study may have been affected by bias is reported in the review. Cochrane researchers then apply
statistical analysis to compare the data of the trials. This creates a review of studies, or
systematic review, giving a comprehensive view of the efficacy of a particular medical intervention. Finished reviews are available as a full report with diagrams, in condensed form or as a plain language summary, in order to provide for every reader of the review.
Abstracting and indexing According to
Journal Citation Reports,
The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews has a 2021
impact factor of 11.874, ranking 20th of 172 journals in the Medicine, General and Internal category, down from 11th in 2020 (167 journals). Reviews are
abstracted and indexed in the following
bibliographic databases:
Science Citation Index Expanded,
Scopus,
CINAHL,
EMBASE,
MEDLINE.
Academic comments The Cochrane Library Feedback tool allows users to provide comments on and feedback of Cochrane Reviews and Protocols in The Cochrane Library. If accepted, the feedback will be published in a scrolling list of comments in reverse chronological order, with the most recent submission at the top of the page. The Collaboration has a procedure for the event of serious error, an event which has only occurred once in its history.
Supplements Annual colloquia have been conducted by Cochrane since 1993. From 1994 onwards, Cochrane has maintained a database of posters and presentations of past colloquia. From 2009 onwards, Cochrane published the abstracts of those colloquia as supplements to the
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. From 2010 to 2016, an annual newsletter related to Cochrane methodology called
Cochrane Methods (), was published as an annual supplement. ==See also==