How Can Research Organizations More Effectively Transfer Research Knowledge to Decision Makers?
McMaster University · Canadian Institute for Advanced Research · +2 more institutions
Abstract
A pplied research organizations invest a great deal of time, and research funders invest a great deal of money generating and (one hopes) transferring research knowledge that could inform decisions about health and health care. Basing these knowledge‐transfer activities on our evolving understanding of the most effective approaches to knowledge transfer will help us achieve value for money in our individual and collective investments in health services and health policy research. Research organizations and research funders can probably be excused for not basing their activities on research evidence until now, however, because the variety of relevant questions, target audiences, and disciplinary perspectives…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 52.15
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 43
Authors
5- JNJohn N. LavisCorresponding
McMaster University
- DRDave Robertson
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Queen's University, Institute for Work & Health, McMaster University
- JWJennifer Woodside
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Queen's University, Institute for Work & Health, McMaster University
- CMChris McLeod
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Queen's University, Institute for Work & Health, McMaster University
- JAJulia Abelson
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Queen's University, Institute for Work & Health, McMaster University
Topics & keywords
- Knowledge transfer
- Knowledge management
- Task (project management)
- Value (mathematics)
- Variety (cybernetics)
- Empirical research
- Health care
- Identification (biology)