 The great CER call approach provides guidance on assessing the confidence in findings from systematic reviews of qualitative research. It has been developed to support decision-making processes such as guideline development and policy formulation. Confidence in the evidence from qualitative evidence synthesis is an assessment of how well a review finding represents the phenomenon of interest. The CER call approach provides a systematic and transparent framework for assessing confidence in individual review findings based on four components, methodological limitations, coherence, adequacy of data, and relevance. A fifth component, dissemination bias, may also be important. The CER call approach aims to provide guidance on how to apply the CER call approach, including making an overall assessment of confidence in a review finding and creating a summary of qualitative findings table. The series is intended for those undertaking qualitative evidence synthesis or using their findings in decision-making processes but is also relevant to guideline development agencies, primary qualitative researchers, and implementation scientists and practitioners. This article was offered by Simon Lewin, Andrew Booth, Claire Glenton, and others. We are article.tv, links in the description below.