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The effectiveness of research implementation strategies for promoting evidence-informed policy and management decisions in healthcare: a systematic review. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The systematic review aimed to evaluate how well research implementation strategies can enhance evidence-informed decision-making in healthcare policies and management.
  • The review included studies published from 2000 to 2016, ultimately analyzing 19 studies that highlighted the impact of policy briefs and tailored messages on public health actions, especially in developing countries and the US.
  • The findings suggested that ongoing support, workshops, and adapted communication strategies are crucial for improving knowledge and implementation of effective public health policies.

Article Abstract

Background: It is widely acknowledged that health policy and management decisions rarely reflect research evidence. Therefore, it is important to determine how to improve evidence-informed decision-making. The primary aim of this systematic review was to evaluate the effectiveness of research implementation strategies for promoting evidence-informed policy and management decisions in healthcare. The secondary aim of the review was to describe factors perceived to be associated with effective strategies and the inter-relationship between these factors.

Methods: An electronic search was developed to identify studies published between January 01, 2000, and February 02, 2016. This was supplemented by checking the reference list of included articles, systematic reviews, and hand-searching publication lists from prominent authors. Two reviewers independently screened studies for inclusion, assessed methodological quality, and extracted data.

Results: After duplicate removal, the search strategy identified 3830 titles. Following title and abstract screening, 96 full-text articles were reviewed, of which 19 studies (21 articles) met all inclusion criteria. Three studies were included in the narrative synthesis, finding policy briefs including expert opinion might affect intended actions, and intentions persisting to actions for public health policy in developing nations. Workshops, ongoing technical assistance, and distribution of instructional digital materials may improve knowledge and skills around evidence-informed decision-making in US public health departments. Tailored, targeted messages were more effective in increasing public health policies and programs in Canadian public health departments compared to messages and a knowledge broker. Sixteen studies (18 articles) were included in the thematic synthesis, leading to a conceptualisation of inter-relating factors perceived to be associated with effective research implementation strategies. A unidirectional, hierarchal flow was described from (1) establishing an imperative for practice change, (2) building trust between implementation stakeholders and (3) developing a shared vision, to (4) actioning change mechanisms. This was underpinned by the (5) employment of effective communication strategies and (6) provision of resources to support change.

Conclusions: Evidence is developing to support the use of research implementation strategies for promoting evidence-informed policy and management decisions in healthcare. The design of future implementation strategies should be based on the inter-relating factors perceived to be associated with effective strategies.

Trial Registration: This systematic review was registered with Prospero (record number: 42016032947).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5686806PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13012-017-0662-0DOI Listing

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