| Literature DB >> 30219065 |
Janine Matus1, Ashlea Walker2, Sharon Mickan2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Building the capacity of allied health professionals to engage in research has been recognised as a priority due to the many benefits it brings for patients, healthcare professionals, healthcare organisations and society more broadly. There is increasing recognition of the need for a coordinated multi-strategy approach to building research capacity. The aim of this systematic review was to identify existing integrated models and frameworks which guide research capacity building for allied health professionals working in publicly funded secondary and tertiary healthcare organisations.Entities:
Keywords: Allied health; Framework; Research activity; Research capacity building; Research culture
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30219065 PMCID: PMC6139135 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3518-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Consists of a suite of research capacity building approaches. | Yes | No. |
| 2. Specifically targets one or more allied health professions’ capacity to perform research. | Yes | No. |
| 3. Includes a rigorous peer-reviewed evaluation component. | Yes | No. |
| 4. Developed for a publicly funded secondary or tertiary healthcare setting, including hospital, outpatient and/or community-based services. | Yes | No. |
Fig. 1Flow diagram of process to identify eligible studies
Description of included studies
| Study | Population | Purpose and intervention | Study design | Data collection and analysis | Research capacity building approaches described in each framework | Structural levels | Assumptions | Research capacity building definition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bamberg, Perlesz, McKenzie & Read, 2010 [ | Australia: | Build and enhance the capacity of a community health service to conduct their own research and evaluation | Qualitative (cooperative inquiry action research design) | Semi-structured interviews, meeting observations, reflective journals | 1. Dissatisfaction with the status quo | None specified | Ely’s ‘8 conditions for implementing innovation’ model support the successful implementation of a framework to produce change | None reported |
| Cooke, Nancarrow, Dyas & Williams, 2008 [ | UK: | Implement and evaluate the ‘designated team approach’ for 6 clinical teams using funding, mentorship and expert support | Qualitative | Process and outcome measures collected on context, activities, experiences, outputs and impacts of interventions | 1. Development of appropriate research skills to apply in practice | Individual | Research capacity building initiatives may occur within, and across, structural levels | ‘A process of individual and institutional development which leads to higher levels of skills and greater ability to perform useful research’ (Trostle, 1992, p.1321) [ |
| Golenko, Pager & Holden, 2012 [ | Australia: | Develop a thematic model to promote and enhance allied health research capacity at an organisational level | Qualitative | Semi-structured in-depth interviews with senior AH managers. | 1. Whole of organisational approach and support from senior managers | Individual | The organisation is the critical link in creating synergy across the 4 levels of research capacity building | ‘A process of individual and institutional development which leads to higher levels of skills and greater ability to perform useful research’ (Trostle, 1992, p.1321) [ |
| Holden, Pager, Golenko, Ware & Weare, 2012 [ | Australia: | Evaluate the impact of a multi-strategy team based research capacity building intervention | Quantitative | Research Capacity and Culture Tool (RCC) | 1. Tailored research skills training programs | Individual | Research capacity building develops individuals and institutions to higher levels of skill and ability to conduct quality research | |
| Hulcombe, Sturgess, Souvlis & Fitzgerald, 2014 [ | Australia: | Develop an organisational research capacity building framework | Descriptive qualitative | Literature review, stakeholder consultation | 1. Leadership and governance | ‘A funded, dynamic intervention… to augment ability to carry out research or achieve objectives in the field of research over the long-term, with aspects of social change as an ultimate outcome’ (Condell & Begley, 2007, p.273) [ | ||
| Whitworth, Haining & Stringer, 2012 [ | UK: | Develop a model for building research capacity | Historical descriptive with qualitative evaluation | Literature review | 1. Whole system approach | Research conscious | The need to embed, influence and contribute to research is a common driver for all health and social care professional groups | Increased capability to engage in research is fundamental to translation of research into practice and to support excellence in healthcare research |
Quality assessment of studies
| Screening (yes/no/unclear) | Methodological quality criteria - Quantitative non-randomised (yes/no/unclear) | |||||
| Study | Clear research question | Relevant data | 3.1 Selection bias minimised | 3.2 Appropriate measurements | 3.3 Comparable participants | 3.4 Outcome data for 80% or above |
| Holden et al., 2012 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear |
| Screening (yes/no/unclear) | Methodological quality criteria - Qualitative (yes/no/unclear) | |||||
| Study | Clear research question | Relevant data | 1.1 Relevant sources of data | 1.2 Relevant data analysis | 1.3 Consideration of context | 1.4 Consideration of researchers’ influence |
| Bamberg et al., 2010 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear |
| Cooke et al., 2008 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Golenko et al., 2012 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Hulcombe et al., 2014 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Unclear |
| Whitworth et al., 2012 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Unclear |
Overview of themes and subthemes
| Supporting clinicians in research | Working together | Valuing research for excellence |
|---|---|---|
| - Education and training | - Collaborations and partnerships with other teams, services and organisations | - Visible support for research |