| Literature DB >> 35039018 |
Terry Cordrey1,2, Elizabeth King3,4, Emma Pilkington3, Katie Gore3,4, Owen Gustafson3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the myriad benefits of research to patients, professionals, and organisations, fewer than 0.1% of the Allied Health Professions workforce are employed in clinical academic roles. Identified barriers include a lack of role modelling, management support, funding, and availability of clinical academic roles. Research capacity building is critical to improving Allied Health Professional research capability. The aim of this evaluation was to explore the current research capacity and culture of Allied Health Professionals to inform future tailored research capacity building strategies at a local level.Entities:
Keywords: Allied health professional; Mixed methods; Research activity; Research capacity; Research culture
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35039018 PMCID: PMC8764821 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-022-07480-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Participant characteristics
| Profession | n (%) | Highest professional qualification | n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dietitian | 18 (19.4) | No degree | 0 |
| Occupational Therapist | 15 (16.1) | Certificate/diploma | 4 (4.3) |
| Physiotherapist | 44 (47.3) | Undergraduate | 51 (54.8) |
| Speech & Language Therapist | 10 (10.8) | Postgraduate | 35 (37.6) |
| Support worker | 6 (6.5) | Doctoral | 3 (3.2) |
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| Acute, general and geriatric medicine | 14 (15.05) | ||
| Cancer surgery and rehabilitation | 12 (12.90) | ||
| Critical care | 14 (15.05) | ||
| Diabetes/endocrinology | 2 (2.15) | ||
| General and specialist surgery | 7 (7.53) | ||
| Management | 2 (2.15) | ||
| Neurology/Neurosurgery | 4 (4.30) | ||
| Neurological and stroke rehabilitation | 20 (21.51) | ||
| Clinical nutrition | 4 (4.30) | ||
| Obstetrics & Gynaecology | 5 (4.30) | ||
| Renal medicine | 6 (4.30) | ||
| Respiratory medicine | 6 (6.45) | ||
RCC results – Department
| Item | Description | Median (IQR) | Unsure n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| i | …has adequate resources to support staff research training | 4 (3-6) | 17 (18) |
| ii | …has funds, equipment or admin to support research activities | 3 (2-5) | 23 (25) |
| iii | …has a plan or policy for research development | 5 (2.5-7) | 26 (28) |
| iv | …has senior managers that support research | 7 (5-8) | 5 (5) |
| v | …ensures staff career pathways are available in research | 4 (2-5) | 18 (19) |
| vi | …ensures organisation planning is guided by evidence | 7 (4.25-8) | 11 (12) |
| vii | …has consumers involved in research | 4 (2-7) | 46 (49) |
| viii | …accesses external funding for research | 3 (1.75-5) | 49 (53) |
| ix | …promotes clinical practice based on evidence | 8 (6-9) | 5 (5) |
| x | …encourages research activities relevant to practice | 7 (5-8) | 11 (12) |
| xi | …has software programs for analysing research data | 2 (1-4.5) | 62 (67) |
| xii | …has mechanisms to monitor research quality | 4 (1-6) | 48 (52) |
| xiii | …has identified experts accessible for research advice | 5 (2-6.5) | 38 (41) |
| xiv | …supports a multidisciplinary approach to research | 5 (4-8) | 24 (26) |
| xv | …has regular forums/bulletins to present research findings | 5 (2-6) | 12 (13) |
| xvi | …engages external parties (e.g. universities) in research | 5 (3-7) | 27 29) |
| xvii | …supports applications for research scholarships/degrees | 5 (2-7) | 30 (32) |
| xviii | …supports the peer-reviewed publication of research | 6 (4-7) | 37 (40) |
RCC results – Team
| Item | Description | Median (IQR) | Unsure n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| i | …has adequate resources to support staff research training | 3 (1.5-6) | 10 (11) |
| ii | …has funds, equipment or admin to support research activities | 2 (1-5) | 21 (23) |
| iii | …does team level planning for research development | 3.5 (1-6) | 11 (12) |
| iv | …ensures staff involvement in developing that plan | 5 (1-7) | 13 (14) |
| v | …has leaders that support research | 7 (5-10) | 5 (5) |
| vi | …provides opportunities to get involved in research | 5 (2-7) | 10 (11) |
| vii | …does planning that is guided by evidence | 7 (5-8) | 8 (9) |
| viii | …has consumer involvement in research activities/planning | 2 (1-5) | 35 (38) |
| ix | …has applied for external funding for research | 2 (1-7) | 33 (35) |
| x | …conducts research activities relevant to practice | 5 (2-8) | 8 (9) |
| xi | …supports applications for research scholarships/degrees | 5 (1.75-8) | 25 (27) |
| xii | …has mechanisms to monitor research quality | 2 (1-6) | 30 (32) |
| xiii | …has identified experts accessible for research advice | 4 (1-7) | 22 (24) |
| xiv | …disseminates research results at research forums/seminars | 5 (3.7.5) | 10 (11) |
| xv | …supports a multidisciplinary approach to research | 6 (4-8) | 16 (17) |
| xvi | …has incentives and support for mentoring activities | 4 (1-6) | 19 (20) |
| xvii | …has external partners (e.g. Universities) engaged in research | 3 (1-7.25) | 25 (27) |
| xviii | …supports the peer-reviewed publication of research | 5 (1-8) | 25 (27) |
| xix | …has software available to support research activities | 1 (1-3) | 43 (46) |
RCC results – Individual
| Item | Description | Median (IQR) | Unsure n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| i | …finding relevant literature | 6 (5-8) | 2 (2) |
| ii | …critically reviewing the literature | 6 (5-7.75) | 3 (3) |
| iii | …using a computer referencing system (e.g. Endnote) | 4 (1-6) | 9 (10) |
| iv | …writing a research protocol | 2 (1-5) | 6 (6) |
| v | …securing research funding | 1 (1-2) | 10 (11) |
| vi | …submitting an ethics application | 1 (1-3) | 9 (10) |
| vii | …designing questionnaires | 5 (2.5-7) | 7 (8) |
| viii | …collecting data e.g. surveys, interviews | 5.5 (3-7) | 5 (5) |
| ix | …using computer data management systems | 3 (1-5.75) | 7 (8) |
| x | …analysing qualitative research data | 4 (1-5) | 4 (4) |
| xi | …analysing quantitative research data | 4 (1-5) | 3 (3) |
| xii | …writing a research report | 3 (1.5-6) | 6 (6) |
| xiii | …writing for publication in peer reviewed journals | 2 (1-5) | 10 (11) |
| xiv | …providing advice to less experienced researchers | 2 (1-4) | 5 (5) |
Grouped themes and selected quotes from the focus groups
| Empowerment | |
|---|---|
| Endorsement to engage | ‘…so actually having that full permission… will make a big difference in people actually participating in research.’ |
| Overcoming competing factors | ‘I know there will be that pressure the wards are full, and there is a big amount of caseload.’ |
| Balancing workload priorities | ‘It is difficult to step back and prioritise time for non-clinical things like research’ |
| Dispelling personal and external guilt | ‘…almost guilt from having not done the clinical or a guilt from how patients or families might feel, or how their colleagues might feel being left?’ |
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| Strong mentorship with accountability | ‘Just having someone that can help you know walk you through that process…’ |
| Breadth of communication channels | ‘…someone having dedicated time to meet …whether it’s just emailing them or sitting down with them.’ |
| Establishment of a resource repository | ‘I think having a central place for research…. it would be nice to know where to go and how to access that.’ |
| Nurturing collaborations internally and externally | ‘So I think it is building those bridges between the disciplines together.’ |
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| Acquiring research skills | ‘…I think the opportunity to get involved with little bits, see if you do like it and learn how to do…’ |
| Scale of skills across the research process | ‘…writing a paper…’; ‘…ethics…’; ‘…presenting…creation of a paper…’ |
| Formulating the right research questions | ‘So right from setting your question which is complex enough sometimes, and having that so you don’t get it wrong at the beginning…’ |
| Development of grassroot to advanced skills | ‘The poster, the case study? It doesn’t necessarily have to be a big study does it? |
| Ownership of research skills and outputs | ‘That’s the hardest thing… I went to a consultant with an idea and it got snatched, and I helped collect data and got funding, and got zero mention…’ |
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| Inclusivity for all staff | ‘…make decisions what would help people from the time they start in the trust to the time where they become more senior researchers.’ |
| Flexibility for staff with varying work patterns | ‘And something less dependent on potentially rotating.’ |
| Formal clinical academic pathways versus research engagement | ‘So a clinical academic pathway as a post where you have protected time for research and training…’; ‘…having the exposure and opportunity to grow in particular areas of research’ |
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| Strengthening staff recruitment and retention | ‘… it will only help with staff retention, for people to grow with that…’ |
| Underpinning staff development and enriching staff experience | ‘I think it helps develop you as a physio. If you don’t ever do research to change things you would still do things the way people did 50 years go.’ |
| Showcasing local research profiles and priorities | ‘…contributing to the physiotherapy department branding…. putting us out on the map….the centre of excellence for AHP research’ |
| Ensuring evidence-based practice | ‘Science is changing all the time so you are going to need an evidence based practice…’ |
| Supporting commissioning and operational provision | ‘I think there are huge benefits, that’s how you illicit change, isn’t it? It’s how you get to influence your service… to control future improvements in care essentially.’ |
Themes aligned to RCC domains
| Individual | Team | Organisation | |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Guilt, prioritisation | Permission, prioritisation | No time – lack of job planning for research |
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| Training | Mentorship, role modelling, access to training, resources | |
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| Education | Exposure to skills/experience | |
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| Engagement | EBP within team | Formal CAC pathway Limitations in post design/structure - rotations/part-time |
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| Influences individual practice | Enhancing profile/recruitment | Enhancing profile/recruitment |