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How to write a Cochrane protocol

Plan your approach and research methods

You will need to publish a protocol in the Cochrane Library before you begin your full review. Your protocol is a public record of your planned approach and research methods.

If your proposal for a new review is accepted, we will invite you to submit a draft protocol. We will give you access to RevMan, our review-writing software, to prepare your draft. Follow the steps below to prepare your draft protocol. For each step, we provide guidance, mandatory standards information, and links to supporting resources and learning.

Before you start

Do you have a conflict of interest?

Cochrane's reputation rests on our independence and research integrity. Our editorial policies are rigorous, particularly our Conflict of Interest policy. If your author team has financial or commercial conflicts, your manuscript may be rejected.

Are you writing a non-intervention review?

The steps on this page are relevant to all reviews. Where the guidance links are specific to intervention reviews, use these resources instead:

1. Formulate your review question(s) and objective(s)

Define the scope of your review and the questions you want to answer.

2. Define your eligibility criteria

What types of studies will you include in your review?

3. Plan your methods

How do you plan to conduct your review? Your methods are the most important part of your protocol. Take your time and contact our Methods Support Unit if you have questions.

Plan and develop search strategies

Your protocol must include at least one search strategy (Medline). Add to the Search strategy section in RevMan: all search strategies for each database (and other sources, if applicable) with search strings, database names, access platforms, search fields and other limitations/settings. This will become the ‘Search strategies’ supplementary material in your submitted and published protocol.

Guidance
Online resource
Online learning
Plan study selection
Plan synthesis of results
Plan data extraction
Plan assessment of methodological limitations
Plan presentation of summary of findings
Plan certainty/strength assessment

4. Write your protocol

Write the background section and check your methods are clearly explained.

Protocols should be concise and follow the Cochrane review template, available as a practice review in RevMan. Read the template even if you are writing a non-intervention review - information in many sections is relevant to all review types. You can also check the PRISMA website for any extension that might be relevant for your review.

Readers of the Cochrane Library include patients, carers, policy-makers and funders from all over the world. Make sure you write in language that is accessible for readers who are not medical experts or who do not speak English as a first language. Please refer to our Style Essentials for information on how to use Cochrane style in your writing.

  • Use short sentences.
  • Use everyday words to explain technical language.
  • Explain abbreviations and acronyms.

If English is not your first language, our AI policy allows you to use AI language tools (such as Grammarly) to improve your writing. If you use any AI tools, always check the final text before you submit. Your Cochrane review does not need to be in perfect English: it should be understandable and clear.

Guidance and learning resources
Guidance
Online learning

Great work – your protocol is complete!

Next: Check your work meets our standards