On 2018 Feb 01, Tim Mathes commented:
We thank Maria-Inti Metzendorf for her comments. We wrote that 2 full-texts were unavailable. By unavailable we mean that the full-text was not available anywhere. For sure, we tried to obtain all articles also via a document delivery services or by contacting the study authors. We assumed that it is not necessary to mention all sources that were used for obtaining full-texts. We chose the term not available, instead of not obtainable because one can never be 100% certain that a full-text don’t exist anywhere. The two mentioned cases were abstracts from the Cochrane Colloquium that were very likely never published as full-texts at the time point of the search. The abstracts did not provide sufficient information to allow an adequate data extraction. The studies were therefore excluded. Both authors are experienced in developing search strategies. Moreover, we tested the search strategy by checking whether the relevant publications known to us were identified before conducting the search (see article Methods section). In the comment no studies are mentioned that were missed by our search strategy. Therefore, it is only an assumption that the search strategy is not sensitive. We suppose this idea has come up because we only used “systematic”sb. In our experience this subset strategy is very sensitive. Our experience has also shown that this subset strategy is even more sensitive than some of the validated search filters for systematic reviews (e.g. health-evidence.ca filter: https://bmcmedresmethodol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2288-12-51). It might be always argued that sensitivity could be further increased. However, scientific manpower is not inexhaustible. So, in our opinion also precision of the search strategy is an important feature. However, we welcome suggestions on how to improve our search strategy, although we are confident that our search strategy is sufficient and did retrieve all relevant studies. We also appreciate comments or suggestions for studies we might have missed.
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