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Building Heath Research Capacity: The Impact of a United Kingdom Collaborative Programme

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Building Heath Research Capacity: The Impact of a United Kingdom Collaborative Programme. / Khan, Koser; Porroche-Escudero, Ana; Georgiou, George et al.
In: Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practice, Vol. 19, No. 4, 7, 01.10.2021.

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Khan K, Porroche-Escudero A, Georgiou G, Popay J. Building Heath Research Capacity: The Impact of a United Kingdom Collaborative Programme. Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practice. 2021 Oct 1;19(4):7.

Author

Khan, Koser ; Porroche-Escudero, Ana ; Georgiou, George et al. / Building Heath Research Capacity : The Impact of a United Kingdom Collaborative Programme. In: Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practice. 2021 ; Vol. 19, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{3e104f86568a4f5cb0cbec1e91e305e8,
title = "Building Heath Research Capacity: The Impact of a United Kingdom Collaborative Programme",
abstract = "Purpose: Strengthening research capacity (RC) amongst health professionals has both organisational and individual benefits. It can increase the quality of research and support the transfer of evidence into practice and policy. However there is little evidence on what works to develop and strengthen RC. This paper contributes to the evidence base by reporting findings from an evaluation of a programme that aimed to build capacity to use and do research amongst NHS and local authority organisations and their staff in a large English research partnership organisation. Methods: The evaluation used multiple qualitative methods including semi-structured interviews, focus groups and workshops (n=131 respondents including public advisers, university, NHS, and local government partners). Results: The RC building programme provided a range of development opportunities for NHS and local authority staff resulting in increased confidence and skills to undertake, participate in, and use research. Additionally, positive influences on organisational practice and collaborative working were reported. Conversely, challenges to developing research capacity were also identified as were the importance of resources, senior level buy-in, and the relevance of research topic to practice in facilitating participation in the programme. Conclusion: Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care North West Coast{\textquoteright}s (CLAHRC-NWC) RC building programme differed from conventional approaches giving less emphasis to formal teaching and more to experiential learning and focusing on both individual capacities and supporting organisations to integrate RC building into staff development programmes. The findings demonstrate that providing opportunities for staff in NHS and local authority organisations to develop research knowledge and skills alongside an infrastructure that supports and encourages their participation in research can have positive impacts on research capacity and organisational research culture. The potential for generalising this approach to other organisational contexts is discussed.",
keywords = "research skills, collaboration CLAHRC, research capacity, evaluation, health inequalities",
author = "Koser Khan and Ana Porroche-Escudero and George Georgiou and Jennie Popay",
year = "2021",
month = oct,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
journal = "Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practice",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Building Heath Research Capacity

T2 - The Impact of a United Kingdom Collaborative Programme

AU - Khan, Koser

AU - Porroche-Escudero, Ana

AU - Georgiou, George

AU - Popay, Jennie

PY - 2021/10/1

Y1 - 2021/10/1

N2 - Purpose: Strengthening research capacity (RC) amongst health professionals has both organisational and individual benefits. It can increase the quality of research and support the transfer of evidence into practice and policy. However there is little evidence on what works to develop and strengthen RC. This paper contributes to the evidence base by reporting findings from an evaluation of a programme that aimed to build capacity to use and do research amongst NHS and local authority organisations and their staff in a large English research partnership organisation. Methods: The evaluation used multiple qualitative methods including semi-structured interviews, focus groups and workshops (n=131 respondents including public advisers, university, NHS, and local government partners). Results: The RC building programme provided a range of development opportunities for NHS and local authority staff resulting in increased confidence and skills to undertake, participate in, and use research. Additionally, positive influences on organisational practice and collaborative working were reported. Conversely, challenges to developing research capacity were also identified as were the importance of resources, senior level buy-in, and the relevance of research topic to practice in facilitating participation in the programme. Conclusion: Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care North West Coast’s (CLAHRC-NWC) RC building programme differed from conventional approaches giving less emphasis to formal teaching and more to experiential learning and focusing on both individual capacities and supporting organisations to integrate RC building into staff development programmes. The findings demonstrate that providing opportunities for staff in NHS and local authority organisations to develop research knowledge and skills alongside an infrastructure that supports and encourages their participation in research can have positive impacts on research capacity and organisational research culture. The potential for generalising this approach to other organisational contexts is discussed.

AB - Purpose: Strengthening research capacity (RC) amongst health professionals has both organisational and individual benefits. It can increase the quality of research and support the transfer of evidence into practice and policy. However there is little evidence on what works to develop and strengthen RC. This paper contributes to the evidence base by reporting findings from an evaluation of a programme that aimed to build capacity to use and do research amongst NHS and local authority organisations and their staff in a large English research partnership organisation. Methods: The evaluation used multiple qualitative methods including semi-structured interviews, focus groups and workshops (n=131 respondents including public advisers, university, NHS, and local government partners). Results: The RC building programme provided a range of development opportunities for NHS and local authority staff resulting in increased confidence and skills to undertake, participate in, and use research. Additionally, positive influences on organisational practice and collaborative working were reported. Conversely, challenges to developing research capacity were also identified as were the importance of resources, senior level buy-in, and the relevance of research topic to practice in facilitating participation in the programme. Conclusion: Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care North West Coast’s (CLAHRC-NWC) RC building programme differed from conventional approaches giving less emphasis to formal teaching and more to experiential learning and focusing on both individual capacities and supporting organisations to integrate RC building into staff development programmes. The findings demonstrate that providing opportunities for staff in NHS and local authority organisations to develop research knowledge and skills alongside an infrastructure that supports and encourages their participation in research can have positive impacts on research capacity and organisational research culture. The potential for generalising this approach to other organisational contexts is discussed.

KW - research skills

KW - collaboration CLAHRC

KW - research capacity

KW - evaluation

KW - health inequalities

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

JO - Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practice

JF - Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practice

IS - 4

M1 - 7

ER -