Overview of the article selection (CAP), rating (MORE EBN), and dissemination (PLuS) processes
1. CAP (Critical Appraisal Process)
Research Associates hand search > 120 journals applying specific Inclusion Criteria to identify high-quality studies that merit clinical attention.
3. McMaster PLuS (Premium LiteratUre Service)
Email alerts: Registrants of end products such as nursing+, KT+, and OBESITY+ sign up to receive alerts based on their clinical interests. Setting relevance and newsworthiness cut-off scores to a high level (e.g, 6 of 7 for both relevance and newsworthiness) will yield a manageable stream of highly rated articles directly applicable to a clinician's practice.
Searchable database: Registrants of end products can also search the cumulative databases for articles using part of an article title, a keyword, or by specialty relevant to their clinical practice. These services are available to users at no charge.
Ratings
from at least 3 nurses per specialty are collated and averaged. Articles with
average ratings of Relevance ≥ 4 and Newsworthiness ≥ 3
for at least one specialty are made available to end users by two methods:
1. email alerts; 2 searchable database.
Articles that pass the Inclusion Criteria have meta data added in CAP (e.g., purpose category, specialties, patient populations) and are then transferred to MORE EBN.
2. MORE™ (McMaster Online of Rating of Evidence)
Articles transferred to MORE are matched to nurse raters with the same clinical specialties and patient populations. Email requests to rate the article with a direct link into MORE are sent to 4 or more nurses for each specialty assigned to the article. MORE raters rate the article on two 7-point scales: 1. Relevance to their clinical specialty; 2. Newsworthiness (i.e., is this news?).