# EQUATOR Reporting Guidelines — Research Design and Reporting Guideline Mapping ## Purpose Quick reference for EQUATOR Network (Enhancing the QUAlity and Transparency Of health Research) reporting guidelines. Assists the research_architect_agent in selecting the appropriate reporting checklist during the methodology design stage, and the report_compiler_agent in ensuring report completeness during the writing stage. --- ## 1. Research Design → Reporting Guideline Mapping Table | Research Design | Primary Reporting Guideline | Applicable Scenario | |----------|------------|---------| | Systematic review / Meta-analysis | **PRISMA** | Literature review integrating multiple studies | | Randomized controlled trial (RCT) | **CONSORT** | Intervention experiments with random assignment | | Observational study (cohort, case-control, cross-sectional) | **STROBE** | Non-interventional quantitative observational research | | Qualitative research | **COREQ** | Interviews, focus groups, observation | | Quality improvement study | **SQUIRE** | Systematic quality improvement project reports | | Diagnostic accuracy study | STARD | Diagnostic tool evaluation | | Prognostic study | TRIPOD | Prediction model development and validation | | Case report | CARE | Single or small number of in-depth case reports | | Economic evaluation | CHEERS | Cost-effectiveness analysis | | Mixed methods research | GRAMMS | Mixed qualitative-quantitative designs | | Animal study | ARRIVE | Animal experiments | | Network meta-analysis | PRISMA-NMA | Multiple comparison meta-analysis | | Scoping review | PRISMA-ScR | Scoping review (less stringent than systematic review) | --- ## 2. PRISMA — Systematic Review Condensed Checklist **Full Name**: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses **Version**: PRISMA 2020 (latest) ### Core Reporting Items | # | Item | Description | Necessity | |---|------|------|--------| | 1 | **Title** | Clearly identify as a systematic review (with or without meta-analysis) | Required | | 2 | **Abstract** | Structured abstract (background, purpose, methods, results, conclusions) | Required | | 3 | **Registration** | Registration number and platform (e.g., PROSPERO) | Strongly recommended | | 4 | **Eligibility criteria** | Inclusion/exclusion criteria in PICOS or PEO format | Required | | 5 | **Information sources** | Databases searched and dates | Required | | 6 | **Search strategy** | Complete search strategy for at least one database | Required | | 7 | **Selection process** | Screening process (number of reviewers, how disagreements were resolved) | Required | | 8 | **Data extraction** | Data extraction methods | Required | | 9 | **Risk of bias** | Risk of bias assessment tool and results | Required | | 10 | **Synthesis methods** | Synthesis method (narrative / meta-analytic) | Required | | 11 | **PRISMA flow diagram** | Literature screening flow diagram | Required | | 12 | **Results** | Characteristics of each study, bias assessment, synthesis results | Required | | 13 | **Discussion** | Certainty of evidence, limitations, relationship to existing knowledge | Required | | 14 | **Funding** | Funding sources and conflicts of interest | Required | ### PRISMA Flow Diagram Template ``` Records identified (n = ) ├── Database searching (n = ) └── Other sources (n = ) ↓ Duplicates removed (n = ) ↓ Records screened (n = ) ├── Excluded (n = ) ↓ Reports sought for retrieval (n = ) ├── Not retrieved (n = ) ↓ Reports assessed for eligibility (n = ) ├── Excluded, with reasons (n = ) │ ├── Reason 1 (n = ) │ ├── Reason 2 (n = ) │ └── Reason 3 (n = ) ↓ Studies included in review (n = ) ├── In qualitative synthesis (n = ) └── In quantitative synthesis (meta-analysis) (n = ) ``` --- ## 3. CONSORT — Randomized Controlled Trial Condensed Checklist **Full Name**: Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials **Version**: CONSORT 2010 + extensions ### Core Reporting Items | # | Item | Description | |---|------|------| | 1 | **Title & Abstract** | Identify as RCT; structured abstract | | 2 | **Background** | Scientific background and trial rationale | | 3 | **Objectives** | Specific objectives or hypotheses | | 4 | **Trial design** | Design type (parallel, crossover, factorial, etc.) and allocation ratio | | 5 | **Participants** | Eligibility criteria, settings, data collection locations | | 6 | **Interventions** | Specific description of each group's intervention (including how and when administered) | | 7 | **Outcomes** | Primary and secondary outcome measures, including definitions and time points | | 8 | **Sample size** | Sample size calculation method (power analysis) | | 9 | **Randomisation** | Random sequence generation method, allocation concealment mechanism | | 10 | **Blinding** | Blinding implementation (who was blinded, how it was implemented) | | 11 | **Statistical methods** | Statistical analysis methods, ITT/PP analysis | | 12 | **Flow diagram** | Participant flow diagram (recruitment → allocation → follow-up → analysis) | | 13 | **Results** | Results per group, effect sizes and precision (CI) | | 14 | **Harms** | Adverse events or side effects | | 15 | **Limitations** | Sources of bias, imprecision, multiple comparisons | | 16 | **Registration** | Trial registration number | ### Higher Education Research Application Notes RCTs in the education field (e.g., comparing teaching methods) commonly face: - Inability to fully randomize (cluster randomization is more common) - Difficulty implementing blinding (teachers/students know their group) - Recommended to use **CONSORT-SPI** (Social and Psychological Interventions extension) --- ## 4. STROBE — Observational Study Condensed Checklist **Full Name**: Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology **Applicable to**: Cohort studies, case-control studies, cross-sectional studies ### Core Reporting Items | # | Item | Description | |---|------|------| | 1 | **Title & Abstract** | Indicate the study design type | | 2 | **Background** | Scientific background, study rationale | | 3 | **Objectives** | Specific objectives, pre-specified hypotheses | | 4 | **Study design** | Clearly state the study design (cohort / case-control / cross-sectional) | | 5 | **Setting** | Setting, location, relevant dates (recruitment, exposure, follow-up) | | 6 | **Participants** | Eligibility criteria, data sources, sampling method | | 7 | **Variables** | Outcome variables, exposure variables, potential confounders, effect modifiers | | 8 | **Data sources** | Data sources and measurement methods for each variable | | 9 | **Bias** | Methods for addressing potential sources of bias | | 10 | **Study size** | How the sample size was determined | | 11 | **Statistical methods** | Statistical methods (including confounder handling, missing data handling) | | 12 | **Results** | Descriptive statistics, main results (including effect sizes, CI, p-value) | | 13 | **Discussion** | Key findings, limitations, generalizability, consistency with other studies | | 14 | **Funding** | Funding sources | ### Higher Education Research Application Notes Common observational studies in higher education: - Student learning outcome cross-sectional survey → cross-sectional STROBE - Graduate employment tracking → cohort STROBE - Dropout risk factor analysis → case-control STROBE --- ## 5. COREQ — Qualitative Research Condensed Checklist **Full Name**: Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research **Applicable to**: Interviews, focus groups ### Core Reporting Items (32 items, across 3 domains) #### Domain 1: Research Team and Reflexivity | # | Item | Description | |---|------|------| | 1 | **Interviewer/facilitator** | Who conducted the interviews or facilitated focus groups | | 2 | **Credentials** | Researcher qualifications | | 3 | **Occupation** | Researcher's professional identity | | 4 | **Gender** | Researcher gender | | 5 | **Experience & training** | Qualitative research experience and training | | 6 | **Relationship with participants** | Researcher's relationship with participants | | 7 | **Participant knowledge** | Participants' level of knowledge about the research | #### Domain 2: Study Design | # | Item | Description | |---|------|------| | 8 | **Methodological orientation** | Theoretical framework (e.g., grounded theory, phenomenology) | | 9 | **Sampling** | Sampling strategy and method | | 10 | **Method of approach** | How participants were contacted | | 11 | **Sample size** | Number of participants | | 12 | **Non-participation** | Number and reasons for refusal to participate | | 13 | **Setting** | Interview location | | 14 | **Presence of non-participants** | Whether non-participants were present during interviews | | 15 | **Description of sample** | Participant demographics | | 16 | **Interview guide** | Whether an interview guide was used and whether it was pilot-tested | | 17 | **Repeat interviews** | Whether repeat interviews were conducted | | 18 | **Audio/visual recording** | Whether audio/video was recorded | | 19 | **Field notes** | Whether field notes were taken | | 20 | **Duration** | Interview duration | | 21 | **Data saturation** | Whether data saturation was discussed | | 22 | **Transcripts returned** | Whether transcripts were returned to participants for feedback | #### Domain 3: Analysis and Findings | # | Item | Description | |---|------|------| | 23 | **Data analysis** | Analysis method (e.g., thematic analysis, IPA) | | 24 | **Software** | Analysis software used | | 25 | **Participant checking** | Whether participants confirmed the findings | | 26 | **Quotations** | Whether quotations are presented to support themes | | 27 | **Data and findings consistency** | Consistency between data and findings | | 28 | **Clarity of major themes** | Whether major themes are clearly presented | | 29 | **Clarity of minor themes** | Whether minor themes are clearly presented | --- ## 6. SQUIRE — Quality Improvement Study Condensed Checklist **Full Name**: Standards for QUality Improvement Reporting Excellence **Version**: SQUIRE 2.0 **Applicable to**: Quality improvement projects, systematic quality improvement, higher education quality assurance (QA) research ### Core Reporting Items | # | Item | Description | |---|------|------| | 1 | **Title** | Identify as a quality improvement study | | 2 | **Abstract** | Structured abstract | | 3 | **Problem description** | Nature and severity of the quality problem | | 4 | **Available knowledge** | Known relevant evidence | | 5 | **Rationale** | Theoretical basis for the improvement initiative | | 6 | **Specific aims** | Specific improvement goals (quantifiable) | | 7 | **Context** | Environmental context of the improvement | | 8 | **Intervention(s)** | Specific description of improvement measures | | 9 | **Study of the intervention(s)** | How the improvement effectiveness was evaluated | | 10 | **Measures** | Outcome measures, process measures, balancing measures | | 11 | **Analysis** | Quantitative/qualitative analysis methods | | 12 | **Ethical considerations** | Ethics review (if applicable) | | 13 | **Results** | Improvement results (including time series data) | | 14 | **Discussion** | Key findings, relationship to context, generalizability | | 15 | **Limitations** | Study limitations | ### Particularly Applicable for Higher Education QA Research SQUIRE is especially valuable as a reference for the following HE quality assurance research: - **Teaching quality improvement**: Introduction and evaluation of new teaching strategies - **Curriculum reform**: Tracking the effects of curriculum redesign - **Student support service improvement**: Systematic improvement of tutoring, counseling, and learning support - **HEEACT accreditation self-improvement**: Improvement actions and tracking in response to accreditation findings - **Institutional research (IR)-driven improvement**: Data-based decision-making and improvement cycles --- ## 7. Higher Education Research Context Recommendations ### Commonly Used Guidelines Ranking | Rank | Guideline | Common HE Usage Scenario | |------|------|----------------| | 1 | **PRISMA** | Systematic review of education policy, teaching strategy meta-analysis | | 2 | **COREQ** | Teacher/student experience interviews, focus groups | | 3 | **STROBE** | Student surveys, institutional data analysis | | 4 | **SQUIRE** | Teaching quality improvement, QA accreditation | | 5 | **CONSORT** | Teaching intervention experiments (less common but high impact) | ### Research Design Quick Selection ``` What is your research type? │ ├── Integrating existing research → PRISMA │ ├── Systematic review → PRISMA 2020 │ ├── Scoping review → PRISMA-ScR │ └── Meta-analysis → PRISMA + MOOSE │ ├── Intervention experiment → CONSORT │ ├── Individual randomization → CONSORT 2010 │ ├── Class/school randomization → CONSORT-Cluster │ └── Social/psychological intervention → CONSORT-SPI │ ├── Observational survey → STROBE │ ├── Cross-sectional survey → STROBE-CS │ ├── Follow-up study → STROBE-Cohort │ └── Retrospective comparison → STROBE-CC │ ├── Qualitative research → COREQ │ ├── Interviews → COREQ │ ├── Focus groups → COREQ │ └── Ethnography → SRQR (alternative) │ └── Quality improvement → SQUIRE ├── PDSA cycle → SQUIRE 2.0 └── QA/accreditation improvement → SQUIRE 2.0 ``` --- ## Quick Reference: 3 Steps to Choosing a Reporting Guideline 1. **Identify your research design**: What type of research design is your study? 2. **Check the mapping table**: Find the corresponding reporting guideline 3. **Download the checklist**: Go to [EQUATOR Network](https://www.equator-network.org/) and download the full checklist > Reminder: Reporting guidelines represent the minimum standard, not the quality ceiling. Meeting the checklist doesn't guarantee high research quality, but failing to meet the checklist typically indicates deficiencies in reporting quality.