Abstract
Background: There is a widely held assumption that research engagement improves health-care
performance at various levels, but little direct empirical evidence.
Objectives: To conduct a theoretically and empirically grounded synthesis to map and explore plausible
mechanisms through which research engagement might improve health services performance. A review of
the effects on patients of their health-care practitioner's or institution's participation in clinical trials was
published after submission of the proposal for this review. It identified only 13 relevant papers and, overall,
suggested that the evidence that research engagement improves health-care performance was less strong
than some thought. We aimed to meet the need for a wider review.
Methods: An hourglass review was developed, consisting of three stages: (1) a planning and mapping
stage; (2) a focused review concentrating on the core question of whether or not research engagement
improves health care; and (3) a wider (but less systematic) review of papers identified during the two
earlier stages. Studies were included in the focused review if the concept of 'engagement in research' was
an input and some measure of 'performance' an output. The search strategy covered the period 1990 to
March 2012. MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature
(CINAHL), Web of Science and other relevant databases were searched. A total of 10,239 papers were
identified through the database searches, and 159 from other sources. A further relevance and quality
check on 473 papers was undertaken, and identified 33 papers for inclusion in the review. A standard
meta-analysis was not possible on the heterogeneous mix of papers in the focused review. Therefore an
explanatory matrix was developed to help characterise the circumstances in which research engagement
might improve health-care performance and the mechanisms that might be at work, identifying two main
dimensions along which to categorise the studies: the degree of intentionality and the scope of the impact.
Results: Of the 33 papers in the focused review, 28 were positive (of which six were positive/mixed) in
relation to the question of whether or not research engagement improves health-care performance. Five
papers were negative (of which two were negative/mixed). Seven out of 28 positive papers reported some
improvement in health outcomes. For the rest, the improved care took the form of improved processes of
care. Nine positive papers were at a clinician level and 19 at an institutional level. The wider review
demonstrated, for example, how collaborative and action research can encourage some progress along the
pathway from research engagement towards improved health-care performance. There is also evidence
that organisations in which the research function is fully integrated into the organisational structure
out-perform other organisations that pay less formal heed to research and its outputs. The focused and
wider reviews identified the diversity in the mechanisms through which research engagement might
improve health care: there are many circumstances and mechanisms at work, more than one mechanism is
often operative, and the evidence available for each one is limited.
Limitations: To address the complexities of this evidence synthesis of research we needed to spend
significant time mapping the literature, and narrowed the research question to make it feasible. We
excluded many potentially relevant papers (though we partially addressed this by conducting a wider
additional synthesis). Studies assessing the impact made on clinician behaviour by small, locally conducted
pieces of research could be difficult to interpret without full knowledge of the context.
Conclusions: Drawing on the focused and wider reviews, it is suggested that when clinicians and
health-care organisations engage in research there is the likelihood of a positive impact on health-care
performance. Organisations that have deliberately integrated the research function into organisational
structures demonstrate how research engagement can, among other factors, contribute to improved
health-care performance. Further explorations are required of research networks and schemes to promote
the engagement of clinicians and managers in research. Detailed observational research focusing on
research engagement within organisations would build up an understanding of mechanisms.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Health Services and Delivery Research |
| Volume | 1 |
| Issue number | 8 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Oct 2013 |
Bibliographical note
Note: This work was supported by the Health Services and Delivery Research programme [grant number 10/1012/09].┬® Queen's Printer and Controller of HMSO 2013. This work was produced by Hanney et al. under the terms of a commissioning
contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health. This issue may be freely reproduced for the purposes of private research and
study and extracts (or indeed, the full report) may be included in professional journals provided that suitable acknowledgement
is made and the reproduction is not associated with any form of advertising. Applications for commercial reproduction should be
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Keywords
- Health services research