| Literature DB >> 22831550 |
Shannon D Scott1, Lauren Albrecht, Kathy O'Leary, Geoff D C Ball, Lisa Hartling, Anne Hofmeyer, C Allyson Jones, Terry P Klassen, Katharina Kovacs Burns, Amanda S Newton, David Thompson, Donna M Dryden.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Knowledge translation (KT) aims to close the research-practice gap in order to realize and maximize the benefits of research within the practice setting. Previous studies have investigated KT strategies in nursing and medicine; however, the present study is the first systematic review of the effectiveness of a variety of KT interventions in five allied health disciplines: dietetics, occupational therapy, pharmacy, physiotherapy, and speech-language pathology.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22831550 PMCID: PMC3780719 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-70
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Inclusion criteria
| | |
|---|---|
| Primary research studies, including experimental, quasi-experimental,
and non-experimental designs ( | |
| Dietitians, occupational therapists, pharmacists, physiotherapists,
speech-language pathologists | |
| Interventions/strategies with a primary purpose of translating
research (or enhancing research uptake) into clinical practice;
examples of potential interventions include reminders, use of
multidisciplinary teams, educational programs, researcher-clinician
interventions. | |
| Empirically assessed change (by way of quantitative or qualitative
data) at the professional/process level ( | |
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram[77].
| Hoffmann, W, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (112 pharmacies) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | Procedures (intensified structured counselling) | Patient | M |
| | | | Professional- educational material | | | |
| Hirsch, JD, et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study (10 pharmacies) | Single | Financial: provider-fee for service | General management of a problem (medication therapy management
services) | Patient | M1 |
| Munroe, WP, et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study (8 pharmacies) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | General management of a problem (patient-focused pharmacist
intervention) | Economic | M |
| Bracchi, RCG, et al. [ | Non-concurrent cohort study (261 Pharmacists) | Single | Professional- educational material | Procedures (adverse drug reaction reporting) | Professional/process | C (significant positive effect) |
| Dualde, E, et al. [ | Non-concurrent cohort study (190 Pharmacists) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | Procedures (pharmacotherapy follow-up services) | Professional/process | M |
| Airaksinen, M, et al. [ | Before-after study (7 pharmacies) | Multiple | Professional- educational materials | Procedures (patient counselling) | Professional/process | M |
| | | | Professional- mass media | | Patient | |
| Benrimoj, SI, et al. [ | Before-after study (40 pharmacies) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | Procedures (standards of practice for handling non-prescription
meds) | Professional/process | M |
| | | | Professional- educational outreach visits | | | |
| | | | Professional- audit and feedback | | | |
| Egen, V, et al. [ | Before-after study (42 Pharmacists) | Multiple | Professional- mass media Professional- educational outreach visits
Professional- educational materials | Patient education (promoting prophylaxis) | Professional/process | M2 |
| Fjortoft, N, et al. [ | Before-after study (49 Pharmacists) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | General management of a problem (lipid management and hypertension
services) | Professional/process | M |
| | | | Professional- educational material | | | |
| Fjortoft, N, et al. [ | Before-after study (33 Pharmacists) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | Other (preceptor leadership) | Professional/process | Not done3 |
| | | | Professional- reminders | | | |
| Martin, BA, et al. [ | Before-after study (25 Pharmacists) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | General management of a problem (tobacco cessation) | Professional/process | C4 (significant positive effect) |
| | | | Professional- educational material | | | |
| Brooks, V. G. [ | Cross-sectional study (213 Pharmacists) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | Other (broad education activities) | Professional/process | M |
| Bekkering, GE, van Tulder MW, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (113 Physiotherapists) | Multiple | Professional- educational materials | General management of a problem (clinical guidelines for low back
pain) | Patient | C (non-significant) |
| | | | Professional- educational meetings | | | |
| Bekkering, GE, Hendricks, HJM, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (113 Physiotherapists) | Multiple | Professional- educational materials | General management of a problem (clinical guidelines for low back
pain) | Professional/process | C (significant positive effect) |
| | | | Professional- educational meetings | | | |
| Hoeijenbos, M, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (113 Physiotherapists) | Multiple | Professional- educational materials (2) | General management of a problem (clinical guidelines for low back
pain) | Economic | M5 |
| | | | Professional- educational meetings | | | |
| Rebbeck, T, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (27 Physiotherapists) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | General management of a problem (clinical guidelines for acute
whiplash) | Patient | C6 (non-significant) |
| | | | Professional- educational outreach visits | | | |
| | | | Professional- educational materials (3) | | | |
| Stevenson, K, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (30 Physiotherapists) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | General management of a problem (clinical management of patients
with low back pain) | Professional/process | M |
| | | | Professional- local opinion leaders | | | |
| Kerssens, JJ, et al. [ | Interrupted time series (without comparison group) (19
Physiotherapists) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | Patient education | Professional/process | C7 (non-significant) |
| Brown, CJ et al. [ | Cross-sectional study (94 Physiotherapists) | Multiple8 | Professional- educational outreach visits | Illness prevention (fall prevention) | Professional/process | C9 (significant positive effect) |
| | | | Professional- educational material (2) | | | |
| Gross, DP, et al. [ | Cross-sectional study (241 Physiotherapists) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | General management of a problem (work disability prevention) | Professional/process | Unclear10 |
| | | | Professional- educational materials | | | |
| | | | Professional- local opinion leaders | | | |
| Schreiber, J, et al. [ | Qualitative - participatory action research (5
Physiotherapists) | multiple | Professional- educational meetings | Other (evidence-based practice) | Professional/process | Sustained positive attitude and beliefs about evidence-based
practice. |
| | | | Professional- educational material (2) | | | |
| | | | | | | Variable performance related to evidence-based practice knowledge
and behaviours. |
| Nikopoulou-Smyrni, P, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (4 Physiotherapists and 4 Occupational
Therapists) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | Procedures (application of new clinical reasoning model) | Professional/process | Unclear |
| | | | Professional-reminders | | | |
| Tripicchio, B, et al. [ | Before-after study (24 Therapists) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | Professional-patient communication (OPN Method) | Professional/process | M |
| McCluskey, A, et al. [ | Before-after study (114 Occupational Therapists) | Multiple | Professional- educational meetings | Other (evidence-based practice) | Professional/process | M |
| | | | Professional- educational material | | | |
| | | | Professional- reminders11 | | | |
| Hammond, A, et al. [ | Cross-sectional study (48 Occupational Therapists) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | General management of a problem (joint protection) | Professional/process | Not done12 |
| McKenna, K, et al. [ | Cross-sectional study (213 Occupational Therapists) | Single | Professional- educational material | Other (evidence-based practice) | Professional/process | Not done |
| Vachon, B, et al. [ | Qualitative - grounded theory (8 Occupational Therapists) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | Other (evidence-based decision making) | Professional/process | Participants developed their ability to use 6 different types of
reflective thinking, which brought about perspective changes in
their clinical decision-making process and sometimes lead to
application in professional practice. Perspective changes were not
achieved at the same pace/level by all participants. |
| Banz, M, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (172 Dieticians) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | Patient education | Professional/process | M |
| Brug, J, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (37 Dieticians) | Single | Professional- educational meetings13 | Procedures (counselling style) | Professional/process | M14 |
| Johnson, ST, et al. [ | Cross-sectional study (103 Dieticians) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | Patient education | Professional/process | M |
| Pennington, L, et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (34 Speech-Language Pathologists) | Single | Professional- educational meetings | Other (evidence-based practice) | Professional/process | C15 (non-significant) |
| Molfenter, SM, et al. [ | Qualitative - not clear (4 Speech-Language Pathologists) | Single | Professional- educational outreach visits16 | General management of a problem (Dysphagia) | Professional/process | The intervention enhanced the participants learning and allowed them to offer a greater quantity and variety of services to their patients. |
1Secondary outcomes measured at the level of economics with mixed effect.
2Secondary outcomes measured at the level of the patient with mixed effect.
3Secondary outcomes identified at the level of the professional/process with positive effect; however, comparative statistics were not done.
4Secondary outcomes measured at the level of the professional/process with a consistent, statistically significant, positive effect and Tertiary outcomes measured at the level of the professional/process with consistent effect (non-significant).
5Secondary outcomes measured at the level of the patient with mixed effect.
6Secondary outcomes measured at the level of the professional/process with mixed effect and the level of economics with consistent effect (non-significant).
7Secondary outcomes measured at the level of the patient with consistent effect (non-significant).
8Participants exposed to other interventions (not described or measured in this research report) as part of an ongoing, community-wide effort to translate research evidence into practice.
9Secondary outcomes were identified at the level of the professional/process; however, results were not reported.
10Secondary outcomes measured at the level of economics with consistent effect (non-significant).
11The intervention also included an optional educational outreach visit; however, data was not collected or reported on this aspect of the intervention.
12Secondary outcome measured at the level of the professional/process with mixed effect.
13The intervention had an additional component termed ‘on demand feedback and advice’ that cannot be classified within the EPOC frameworkiple (n=1 (n=21.
14Secondary outcomes measured at the level of the patient with mixed effect.
15Secondary outcomes measured at the level of economics with consistent effect (non-significant).
16The intervention had an additional component termed ‘monitor progress, provide assistance on as needed basis via email, telephone, in-person’ that cannot be classified within the EPOC framework.
| ( | ( | ( | ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | |
| Hoffmann, W, | N | N | Y | No active control |
| Hirsch, JD, | N | N | N | No active control |
| Munroe, WP, | N | N | N | No active control |
| Bracchi, RCG, | N | N | N | No active control |
| Dualde, E, | N | N | N | No control group |
| Airaksinen, M, | N | N | N | No control group |
| Benrimoj, SI, | N | Y | Y | No control group |
| Egen, V, | N | N | N | No control group |
| Fjortoft, N, | N | N | N | No control group |
| Fjortoft, N, | N | N | N | No control group |
| Martin, BA, | N | N | N | No control group |
| Brooks, VG, | N | N | N | No active control |
| | | | | |
| Bekkering, GE, van Tulder MW, | N | N | N | No active control |
| Bekkering, GE, Hendricks, HJM, | N | N | N | No active control |
| Hoeijenbos, M, | N | N | N | No active control |
| Rebbeck, T, | N | N | N | N |
| Stevenson, K, | N | N | N | N |
| Kerssens, JJ, | N | Y | Y | No active control |
| Brown, CJ | N | N | N | No control group |
| Gross, DP, | N | N | Y | No control group |
| Schreiber, J, | N | N | N | No control group |
| | | | | |
| Nikopoulou-Smyrni, P, | N | N | N | N |
| Tripicchio, B, | N | N | N | No control group |
| | | | | |
| McCluskey, A, | N | N | N | No control group |
| Hammond, A, | N | N | N | No control group |
| McKenna, K, | N | N | Y | No control group |
| Vachon, B, | N | Y | N | No control group |
| | | | | |
| Banz, M, | N | N | N | No active control |
| Brug, J, | N | N | N | No active control |
| Johnson, ST, | N | N | N | No active control |
| | | | | |
| Pennington, L, | N | N | N | No control group |
| Molfenter, SM, | N | Y | N | No control group |