| Literature DB >> 30111339 |
Roman Kislov1,2, Paul M Wilson3,4, Sarah Knowles1,2, Ruth Boaden1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRCs) were funded by NIHR in England in 2008 and 2014 as partnerships between universities and surrounding health service organisations, focused on improving the quality of healthcare through the conduct and application of applied health research. The aim of this review is to synthesise learning from evaluations of the CLAHRCs.Entities:
Keywords: CLAHRC; Co-production; Collaboration; Evaluation; Implementation; Knowledge mobilisation; Learning health systems
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30111339 PMCID: PMC6094566 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-018-0805-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1Flow Diagram of CLAHRC evaluations
NIHR funded evaluations of CLAHRCs
| Title, years and funding | Design | Final report and related outputs |
|---|---|---|
| HS&DR-09/1809/1073: A formative evaluation of Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC): institutional entrepreneurship for service innovation [ | Longitudinal mixed methods. Qualitative case studies combined interview data (174 in total across all nine CLAHRCs and 4 in-depth sites), archival data and observations, over a 4-year period. |
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| HS&DR-09/1809/1075: Networked innovation in the health sector: comparative qualitative study of the role of Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care in translating research into practice [ | Mixed-methods in 2 temporal phases. Qualitative in-depth case studies with 3 CLAHRCs and 3 similarly networked innovation initiatives in the USA and Canada. |
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| HS&DR-09/1809/1072: Collective action for knowledge mobilisation: a realist evaluation of the Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care [ | Longitudinal realist evaluation involving hypothesis generation, refining, testing and programme theory specification. |
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| HS&DR-09/1809/1074: Delivering the aims of the Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care: understanding their strategies and contributions [ | Mixed methods in two temporal phases. |
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Main findings from the NIHR funded evaluations of CLAHRCs
| Author, year | |
|---|---|
| Lockett, 2014 [ | Local context and key service and research actors played an important role in shaping the initial design of the CLAHRCs. This initial design then ‘locked-in’ CLAHRCs to specific paths of development. Five different archetype models of CLAHRCs were identified: |
| Scarborough, 2014 [ | Mechanisms of KT developed by the each CLAHRC were influenced by the vision and beliefs of their senior leadership teams and shaped by the emergent management practices. This in turn shaped the kinds of social networks that they developed and influenced the way different groups worked together. |
| Rycroft-Malone, 2015 [ | Opportunities for CLAHRCs to implement research in practice were influenced by the vision and views of those who set them up, including how they had structured the CLAHRCs. |
| Soper, 2015 [ | CLAHRCs were rooted in local relationships, built around matched funding from NHS organisations, local capacity and expertise. The local remit supported the development of collaboration, encouraged responsiveness to local research needs and shaped the separate character of each CLAHRC. |
Other evaluations of individual CLAHRCs
| Author, year and aims | Design | Main findings |
|---|---|---|
| Ariss, 2012 [ | Described as a developmental evaluation approach combined with realist evaluation and a utilisation focus to guide the evaluation activities. | Implications and opportunities are reported under nine interlinked headings: |
| Caldwell, 2012 [ | Uses a variation of Goffman’s frame analysis to trace the development of the initial national CLAHRC policy to its implementation at three levels. | Analysis at the macro (national policy), meso (national programme) and micro (North West London) levels showed a significant common understanding of the aims and objectives of the policy and programme. Local level implementation in North West London was also consistent with these. |
| Chew, 2013 [ | A qualitative case study in an anonymised CLAHRC exploring the formalised intermediary roles of seven ‘knowledge brokers’ enacted in different partner organisations. | Structural issues around professional boundaries, organisational norms and career pathways may make such roles difficult to sustain in the long term. |
| Cooke, 2015 [ | Mixed methods | Dedicated CLAHRC resources, including the use of ‘matched funding’, increased the potential for engagement across academic and practice boundaries. |
| Fitzgerald, 2015 [ | Longitudinal case study of one CLAHRC in first 3 years of existence (2008–2011). | Setting up translational networks is insufficient in itself. To leverage benefit attention must be paid to devising a structure which integrates research production and use and facilitates lateral cross-disciplinary and cross-organisational communication |
| Gerrish, 2014 [ | Qualitative evaluation using focus group and individual interviews with 14 clinical and academic secondees and five managers from partner organisations to explore contribution secondees made to KT projects. | Six criteria for judging the success of the secondments at individual, team and organisation level were identified: KT skills development, effective workload management, team working, achieving KT objectives, enhanced care delivery and enhanced education delivery. |
| Heaton, 2015, 2016 [ | Longitudinal case study of one CLAHRC over 5 years of existence (2008–12). | Identification of five rules based on nine associated mechanisms for promoting knowledge translation through collaborations based on principles of co-production (active agents, equality of partners, reciprocity and mutuality, transformative and facilitated). |
| Howe, 2013 [ | Assessment of extent to which 17 projects engaged with eight promoted collaborative methods (2010–2011). | Uptake of collaborative methods was variable across projects with no project engaging with all methods, but all engaging with some. |
| Jordan, 2014 [ | Utilises data from a proposed internal evaluation of the CLAHRC-NDL [ | There can be a disparity between initial expectations and actual experiences of involvement for service users. Therefore, as structured via ‘The Three Rs’ (Roles, Relations and Responsibilities), aspects of the relationship are evaluated (e.g. motivation, altruism, satisfaction, transparency, scope, feedback, communication, time). Regarding the inclusion of service users in health research teams, a careful consideration of ‘The Three Rs’ is required to ensure expectations match experiences. |
| Kislov, 2012 [ | Qualitative embedded case study design, encompassing 20 semi structured interviews with practice doctors, nurses, managers and members of the CLAHRC facilitation team. | The study showed that in spite of epistemic and status differences, professional boundaries between general practitioners, practice nurses and practice managers co-located in the same practice over a relatively long period of time could be successfully bridged, leading to the formation of multiprofessional communities of practice. |
| Kislov, 2014 [ | Qualitative single case study involving a purposive sample of 45 research participants drawn from both core and peripheral membership of the four domains of CLAHRC GM. | The structure of the CLAHRC institutionalised the pre-existing gap between the activities of research and implementation strands underpinned by political (conflicting goals and incentives) and epistemic (conflicting attitudes to evidence) factors. This prevented an open conflict between the strands, but at the same time removed the need to renegotiate the boundary and develop a shared practice. |
| Kislov, 2016 [ | Qualitative embedded case study design involving 57 research participants drawn from three projects and the management team to represent different sectors (primary, community and secondary care) and occupational groups (doctors, nurses, care coordinators, managers, etc.5). | Formally designated knowledge brokers mitigate the constraining power of context by transferring some of their knowledge brokering functions to managers and clinicians; by conforming to the local ways of doing things; and by complementing (and even replacing) the situated processes of knowledge brokering with the supply of knowledge and skills to clinicians wishing to achieve their organisational performance objectives. These strategies reveal how, through use of knowledge brokers, macro-level institutional arrangements exert influence on the dynamics of knowledge processes unfolding in practice, how the formalised and emergent elements of knowledge brokering as a collectively enacted phenomenon are intertwined, and how the professional expertise and authority of hybrids can become an impediment to their knowledge brokering function. |
| Kislov, 2017 [ | Qualitative longitudinal case study involving 88 participants. | Using a Bourdieusian lens, three main themes emerged: (1) changes in the distribution of economic, cultural and social capital mobilised by boundary spanners; (2) implications of these changes for the relationships between the intersecting fields; and (3) effects on the social trajectories of boundary spanners. |
| Marston, 2013 [ | A 4-year ethnographic study, using participant observation of PPI activities run by CLAHRC Northwest London (NWL) (160 h) and in-depth interviews ( | At first, health professionals demanded evidence of PPI effects of the type typical in clinical practice, such as cost-effectiveness data, treating PPI as a discrete intervention to improve a specific health outcome. They often spoke about effect in linear terms, and measured success using indicators such as successful participant recruitment and retention or tangible non-health outputs (e.g. leaflets co-designed with patients), rather than changes in health outcomes. |
| Martin, 2013 [ | Longitudinal, mixed-methods using interviews, observations and documentary analysis. | The breadth of CLAHRCs’ missions seems crucial to mobilise the diverse stakeholders needed to succeed, but also produces disagreement about what the prime goal of the CLAHRC should be. A process of consensus building is necessary to instil a common vision among CLAHRC members, but deep-seated institutional divisions continue to orient them in divergent directions, which may need to be overcome through other means. |
| Reed, 2018 [ | Learning from 22 evidence translation projects to used develop theory and a conceptual framework. | Three strategic principles, (1) ‘act scientifically and pragmatically’—knowledge of existing evidence is only one part of the effort required to achieve sustainable improvements in care in complex systems; (2) ‘embrace complexity’—evidence-based interventions only work if supporting or dependent practices and processes of care are working sufficiently well; (3) ‘engage and empower’—evidence translation and system navigation requires commitment and insights from staff and patients with experience of the local system, and changes need to align with their motivations and concerns. |
| Renedo, 2015 [ | Uses data drawn from the larger ethnographic study by Marston [ | Patients used four elements of organisational culture as resources to help them collaborate with healthcare professionals. The four elements were (1) organisational emphasis on non-hierarchical, multidisciplinary collaboration; (2) organisational staff ability to model desired behaviours of recognition and respect; (3) commitment to rapid action, including quick translation of research into practice; and (4) the constant data collection and reflection process facilitated by improvement methods. |
| Spyridonidis, 2015 [ | Undertaken as part of a longitudinal 5-year exploration of the development of a CLAHRC. | Relationship between leadership and KT shifted over time from an authoritarian top-down leadership with set outcome measures for KT performance to one of distributed leadership that better accommodated the diverse range of CLAHRC stakeholders. |
| Spyridonidis, 2015 [ | Longitudinal qualitative study in CLAHRC NWL. | Three differing responses were found to taking on a hybrid physician–manager role (the sceptics, the innovators and the late majority), with identity emerging as a mitigating factor for negotiating potentially conflicting roles. |
| Waterman, 2015 [ | A prospective co-operative inquiry with eight knowledge transfer associates responsible for the facilitating the implementation of evidence based practices in six projects in primary- and community-care. | Facilitation is context dependent and ‘one size does not fits all’. |
| Wright, 2013 [ | Exploratory study using interviews with 17 knowledge brokers and 5 mentors to elicit their experiences as first-time knowledge brokers, attempting to bridge the research-practice gap within CLAHRC NDL. | Four themes described their experiences: expectations, pragmatics, emotional reactions and outcomes. |