| Literature DB >> 28874152 |
Kathryn M Sibley1,2, Patricia L Roche3, Courtney P Bell3, Beverley Temple4, Kristy D M Wittmeier3,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The importance of effective translation of health research findings into action has been well recognized, but there is evidence to suggest that the practice of knowledge translation (KT) among health researchers is still evolving. Compared to research user stakeholders, researchers (knowledge producers) have been under-studied in this context. The goals of this study were to understand the experiences of health researchers in practicing KT in Manitoba, Canada, and identify their support needs to sustain and increase their participation in KT.Entities:
Keywords: Exchange; Health research; Implementation science; Knowledge mobilization; Qualitative analysis; Semi-structured interviews; Transfer
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28874152 PMCID: PMC5585925 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2573-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Participant characteristics (n = 26)
| Characteristic | Number of participants |
|---|---|
| Primary Health Research Pillar | |
| Clinical | 8 |
| Biomedical | 7 |
| Social, cultural, environmental and population health | 6 |
| Health systems and services | 5 |
| Career Stage | |
| Trainee | 5 |
| Early (0–5 years) | 6 |
| Mid-career (5–14 years) | 6 |
| Established (15+ years) | 7 |
| Not specified | 2 |
| Percent of time spent on research | |
| 25% or less | 4 |
| 25% - 75% | 6 |
| 75% or more | 14 |
| Not specified | 2 |
| Research methodology | |
| Mostly or all quantitative methods | 14 |
| Mostly or all qualitative methods | 4 |
| Mixed methods | 5 |
| Not specified | 3 |
Common conceptualizations of knowledge translation
| KT concept | Representative quote | Pillar & participant |
|---|---|---|
| Application of research in changing or improving healthcare |
| Clinical (P16)a |
|
| Social, cultural and environmental health (P05) | |
| Dissemination of results at the end of the research process |
| Health systems and services (P08) |
|
| Biomedical (P17) | |
| Working alongside stakeholders at all stages of the research |
| Social, cultural and environmental health (P11) |
aP: Refers to individual participants
KT support needs identified by participants
| Type of need | Example |
|---|---|
| Resources | |
| Funding | KT-specific grants, subsidies |
| Expertise/personnel | KT consultants or team members, communications specialists, clinical research associates, statisticians |
| Time | Protected time (academic appointments) |
| Support | |
| Recognition | Promotion and tenure |
| Education and training | Workshops, info sessions, webinars, ‘KT 101’, graduate courses, skills assessments for team members |
| Leadership and mentoring | Institutional leaders, aggressive and active involvement in KT |
| Institutional/cultural changes | Improved KT infrastructure (e.g.: access to information), structural changes (e.g.: pay-for-performance healthcare model) |
| Opportunities | |
| Collaboration and networking | Facilitated networks, provider engagement, large consortiums |
| Experience in KT | Hands-on KT, engaging in process, experiencing KT successes |
| Research | |
| Advance the science of KT | Finding gaps, context-specific KT strategies, evaluation and maintenance of KT strategies, systems research |
| Promotion of KT | |
| Increased awareness, communication, discussion of KT | Regular events, social media development opportunities, understanding roles and expectations between researchers and stakeholders |