麻豆传媒

 

Sitting on mountains of research

- June 22, 2010

Doctors would have to read about 100 scientific papers every day to keep up with the latest techniques and practices in their field. And that reading is only going to increase as the amount of knowledge in the medical field doubles every seven years.

These statistics come from Ian Graham, vice president of knowledge translation at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. 鈥淧eople don鈥檛 have a lot of time,鈥 said Dr. Graham. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of research going into what can be done to help practitioners use best practices.鈥

The 2010 Knowledge Utilization Colloquium (KU 2010) took place in Halifax June 10-11. It was designed to bring together healthcare professionals and researchers and close the gap between what is actually done in a healthcare setting and what are known to be better procedures.

鈥淚t鈥檚 about taking the best evidence we鈥檝e got and getting it used by clinicians, by the public, by decision makers, by policy makers,鈥 said Carole Estabrooks, professor at the University of Alberta and Canada Research Chair in Knowledge Translation. Dr. Estabrooks聽co-chaired the colloquium with Ingrid Sketris, professor with 麻豆传媒's College of Pharmacy.

If this all sounds familiar, it鈥檚 because KU 2010 was the third in a series of healthcare meetings to take place in Halifax in recent weeks, which was a challenge for organizers. 鈥淥ne of the problems is that there is a lot of confusion around the terminology,鈥 explained Dr. Graham.

The聽synthesis of scientific聽knowledge into information that a doctor or other healthcare provider can easily read is known as knowledge translation. Knowledge utilization is the next step.

鈥淚t鈥檚 about taking the best evidence we鈥檝e got and getting it used by clinicians, by the public, by decision makers, by policy makers,鈥 said Dr. Estabrooks. 鈥淲e call it a colloquium because we don鈥檛 do the traditional conference things 鈥 presentations and abstracts. We try to create a space where we can actually talk about how we (should) advance the field.鈥

The concept of knowledge utilization really took off in the early 1990s and it continues to grow today. 鈥淲e know that 20 or 30 per cent of people don鈥檛 receive the care they should, or receive care that鈥檚 harmful,鈥 said Dr. Estabrooks; an indication of the important work left to be done in聽knowledge utilization聽and its related fields of study.

Keynote speaker Colleen Flood, Canada Research Chair in Health and Law Policy and former associate director of the Health Law Institute at Dal, discussed one method of knowledge utilization, which she called a 'best brains exchange.'

鈥淲e sit on a mountain of research that鈥檚 already there, tons and tons and tons of it,鈥 said Dr. Flood. 鈥淗ow do we get that (research) into the decision makers鈥 heads?鈥

During a best brains exchange, researchers and decision makers are brought together in a closed door meeting to discuss a high priority, ministry-identified issue. Researchers present evidence in 20-minute periods so that decision makers receive only the most important information.

Funding for the colloquium聽came from聽麻豆传媒, Alberta Innovates 鈥 Health Solutions (formerly Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research), Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Institute of Health Services and Policy Research,聽IWK Health Centre, Capital District Health Authority, Halifax; and Nova Scotia Department of Health.


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