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Lost in translation: transferring knowledge from research to clinical practice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

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Summary

Using a new treatment is not an instantaneous act. There is a gap between research and practice and carefully evaluated evidence often fails to achieve widespread use. Various factors intercede along the pathway from knowledge generation to knowledge utilisation. These can hinder, or indeed facilitate, the use of research evidence in psychiatry. Knowledge translation is a discipline that attempts to identify and understand these barriers and facilitators to knowledge transfer. In this article, the terminology and key concepts of knowledge translation will be outlined, the evidence transfer pipeline described and obstacles and facilitators to uptake of evidence explored. The article also identifies sources of information on knowledge transfer. Innovative approaches designed to enhance the uptake of evidence from research, such as summaries, systematic reviews and targeted messaging, are also described.

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Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2013 
Figure 0

FIG 1 The ‘leaky evidence pipeline’ (adapted from Glasziou 2005, with permission).

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