| Literature DB >> 28990211 |
Paul A Schulte1, Thomas R Cunningham1, Leslie Nickels2, Sarah Felknor3, Rebecca Guerin1, Fred Blosser2, Chia-Chia Chang2, Pietra Check2, Donald Eggerth1, Michael Flynn1, Christy Forrester2, David Hard4, Heidi Hudson1, Jennifer Lincoln5, Lauralynn T McKernan1, Preethi Pratap6, Carol M Stephenson1, Donna Van Bogaert1, Lauren Menger-Ogle1.
Abstract
Translation research in occupational safety and health is the application of scientific investigative approaches to study how the outputs of basic and applied research can be effectively translated into practice and have an impact. This includes the study of the ways in which useful knowledge and interventions are disseminated, adopted, implemented, and institutionalized. In this paper, a 4-stage framework (Development, Testing, Institutionalization, and Evaluation) is presented. Translation research can be used to enhance the use and impact of occupational safety and health knowledge and interventions to protect workers. This type of research has not received much attention in the occupational safety and health field. However, in contemporary society, it is critical to know how to make an impact with the findings and outputs of basic and applied research. This paper provides a novel framework for consideration of how to advance and prioritize translation research for occupational safety and health.Entities:
Keywords: dissemination; intervention; research-to-practice
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28990211 PMCID: PMC5771485 DOI: 10.1002/ajim.22780
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Ind Med ISSN: 0271-3586 Impact factor: 2.214