Presentation abstracts review criteria

For presentation abstracts peer reviewers will be asked to assess the soundness of your scholarship and the extent to which your abstract aligns with the conference themes and aims.

Soundness of the scholarship

The following areas will be considered by reviewers when scoring presentation abstracts for oral and poster submissions:

1)  Importance of the problem or topic 

Is the problem (or topic area) original/important/relevant to academic primary care?
Are the aims of the study clearly described?

2)  The approach (design/methods)

Is the study design appropriate for the stated research question(s) and aims?
Are the methods/ methodological approach clearly described?
What is the overall quality of the study methods employed (or proposed)?

3) Findings

Are the key findings clearly described?
How confident is the reviewer in the strength/trustworthiness of the findings and/or conclusions/discussion presented? (For work in progress reviewers will be asked to assess the quality of the conclusion and/or discussion, taking into account interim findings/conclusions and how well the author describes plans for progressing the research)

4) Consequences (significance) / implications

How important are these research findings?
How and to what extent are the findings likely to influence clinical or research practice, education or policy? (For work in progress reviewers will be asked to consider the potential of the project to influence clinical or research practice, education or policy)

5) Overall impressesion

Was this a well written abstract?
Was it well presented?
Will it promote discussion/debate?
Will this study/idea change anything?

Peer review process

All submitted abstracts will be reviewed independently by at least two peer reviewers. The aim of this process is to ensure a high quality programme of presentations and a lively, informative meeting. We welcome interesting, well designed and well conducted work at all stages of development / delivery and ask reviewers to give equivalent weight to abstracts relating to work-in-progress and completed work. The main focus of our peer review process is the extent to which submissions meet the criteria for quality, relevance and importance.

Reviewers are asked to mark abstracts using the full range of scores stated for each of the criteria. Each criterion has a score range with 1 being the lowest, and higher scores representing higher quality abstracts (e.g. 1=poor, 5=excellent).

 

A high scoring abstract will:

identify an important problem (one which responds to a clear gap in the literature; a practice or policy priority; a topic which is fundamental to primary care)
describe a clear research question and aim
set out an appropriate study design which is capable of meeting the stated aims
offer a clear description of methods and methodological approach
include findings which are trustworthy, or - for work in progress - a compelling conclusion and/or discussion which justifies the approach being taken in the ongoing research

 

A lower scoring abstract is likely to include poorly focused research that is not highly relevant to primary care or which is poorly designed or executed.