A mixed methods study of the factors that influence whether intervention research has policy and practice impacts: perceptions of Australian researchers. Newson, R., King, L., Rychetnik, L., Bauman, A., E., Redman, S., Milat, A., J., Schroeder, J., Cohen, G., & Chapman, S. BMJ Open, 1, 2015.
A mixed methods study of the factors that influence whether intervention research has policy and practice impacts: perceptions of Australian researchers [link]Website  abstract   bibtex   
Objectives To investigate researchers’ perceptions about the factors that influenced the policy and practice impacts (or lack of impact) of one of their own funded intervention research studies.Design Mixed method, cross-sectional study.Setting Intervention research conducted in Australia and funded by Australia's National Health and Medical Research Council between 2003 and 2007.Participants The chief investigators from 50 funded intervention research studies were interviewed to determine if their study had achieved policy and practice impacts, how and why these impacts had (or had not) occurred and the approach to dissemination they had employed.Results We found that statistically significant intervention effects and publication of results influenced whether there were policy and practice impacts, along with factors related to the nature of the intervention itself, the researchers’ experience and connections, their dissemination and translation efforts, and the postresearch context.Conclusions This study indicates that sophisticated approaches to intervention development, dissemination actions and translational efforts are actually widespread among experienced researches, and can achieve policy and practice impacts. However, it was the links between the intervention results, further dissemination actions by researchers and a variety of postresearch contextual factors that ultimately determined whether a study had policy and practice impacts. Given the complicated interplay between the various factors, there appears to be no simple formula for determining which intervention studies should be funded in order to achieve optimal policy and practice impacts.
@article{
 title = {A mixed methods study of the factors that influence whether intervention research has policy and practice impacts: perceptions of Australian researchers},
 type = {article},
 year = {2015},
 volume = {5},
 websites = {http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/5/7/e008153.abstract},
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 abstract = {Objectives To investigate researchers’ perceptions about the factors that influenced the policy and practice impacts (or lack of impact) of one of their own funded intervention research studies.Design Mixed method, cross-sectional study.Setting Intervention research conducted in Australia and funded by Australia's National Health and Medical Research Council between 2003 and 2007.Participants The chief investigators from 50 funded intervention research studies were interviewed to determine if their study had achieved policy and practice impacts, how and why these impacts had (or had not) occurred and the approach to dissemination they had employed.Results We found that statistically significant intervention effects and publication of results influenced whether there were policy and practice impacts, along with factors related to the nature of the intervention itself, the researchers’ experience and connections, their dissemination and translation efforts, and the postresearch context.Conclusions This study indicates that sophisticated approaches to intervention development, dissemination actions and translational efforts are actually widespread among experienced researches, and can achieve policy and practice impacts. However, it was the links between the intervention results, further dissemination actions by researchers and a variety of postresearch contextual factors that ultimately determined whether a study had policy and practice impacts. Given the complicated interplay between the various factors, there appears to be no simple formula for determining which intervention studies should be funded in order to achieve optimal policy and practice impacts.},
 bibtype = {article},
 author = {Newson, Robyn and King, Lesley and Rychetnik, Lucie and Bauman, Adrian E and Redman, Sally and Milat, Andrew J and Schroeder, Jacqueline and Cohen, Gillian and Chapman, Simon},
 journal = {BMJ Open},
 number = {7}
}

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