Bangor University, Bangor, UK.
School of Clinical Dentistry, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2021 Feb;49(1):1-9. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12570. Epub 2020 Aug 19.
The implementation of research evidence to promote oral health is critical, given the intransigent and emerging challenges for policymakers at a population level. Despite this, little attention has been paid to implementation research within the evidence-based paradigm. This is important as getting research evidence into clinical practice is not a linear path that consists of simple sequential steps. In this article, we argue that we need to consider a broader range of conceptual and methodological approaches to increase the value of information generated. This should be undertaken either in parallel with empirical and experimental designs, or in some cases, instead of. This is important if we are going to understand the complexity and contextual knowledge of the 'system', within which interventions are implemented. Involving key stakeholders alongside empirical and experimental designs is one helpful approach. Examples of these approaches include Patient and Public Involvement and the development of Core Outcome Sets, where the views of those that will be potentially affected by the research, are included. The use of theoretical frameworks and process evaluations alongside trials are also important, if they are fully integrated into the approach taken to address the research question. A more radical approach is using participatory designs and 'systems thinking'. Participatory approaches include subject matter 'experts by experience'. These include patients, their families, carers, healthcare professionals, services managers, policymakers, commissioners and researchers. Participatory approaches raise important questions about who facilitates the process, when it should happen and how the diverse actors become meaningfully engaged so that their involvement is active, democratic and ongoing. We argue that the issues of control, power and language are central to this and represent a paradigmatic shift to conventional approaches. Systems thinking captures the idea that public health problems commonly involve multiple interdependent and interconnected factors, which interact with each other dynamically. This approach challenges the simplicity of the hierarchy of evidence and linear sequential logic, when it does not account for context. In contrast, systems thinking accepts complexity de novo and emphasizes the need to understand the whole system rather than its individual component parts. We conclude with the idea that participatory and systems thinking help to unpack the diverse agents that are often involved in the generation and translation of evidence into clinical dental practice. It moves our conception of research away from a simple exchange between 'knowledge producers' and 'knowledge users' and raises both methodological and epistemological challenges.
将研究证据付诸实施以促进口腔健康至关重要,因为这对于政策制定者在人群层面上具有不可调和且不断出现的挑战。尽管如此,在循证范式内,实施研究却很少受到关注。这很重要,因为将研究证据应用于临床实践并非是一个由简单的顺序步骤组成的线性过程。在本文中,我们认为我们需要考虑更广泛的概念和方法途径,以提高所产生信息的价值。这可以与实证和实验设计同时进行,或者在某些情况下代替实证和实验设计进行。如果我们要了解干预措施实施的“系统”的复杂性和背景知识,这一点很重要。让关键利益相关者参与实证和实验设计是一种有益的方法。这些方法的例子包括患者和公众参与以及核心结局集的制定,其中包括可能受到研究影响的人的观点。如果将理论框架和过程评估与试验一起使用,并且将其完全纳入解决研究问题的方法中,那么这也是很重要的。更激进的方法是使用参与式设计和“系统思维”。参与式方法包括主题“经验丰富的专家”。这些专家包括患者、他们的家人、护理人员、医疗保健专业人员、服务管理人员、政策制定者、专员和研究人员。参与式方法提出了一些重要的问题,例如谁来促进这个过程,何时进行以及如何使不同的参与者有意义地参与进来,以使他们的参与是积极的、民主的和持续的。我们认为,控制、权力和语言问题是这方面的核心问题,代表了对传统方法的范式转变。系统思维捕捉到这样一种理念,即公共卫生问题通常涉及多个相互依存和相互关联的因素,这些因素相互动态地相互作用。这种方法挑战了证据层次结构和线性顺序逻辑的简单性,因为它没有考虑到背景。相比之下,系统思维从新的角度接受复杂性,并强调需要理解整个系统,而不是其各个组成部分。最后,我们提出了这样一种观点,即参与式和系统思维有助于分解通常参与将证据转化为临床牙科实践的各个不同的参与者。它使我们对研究的概念从“知识生产者”和“知识使用者”之间的简单交流转移开来,并提出了方法和认识论方面的挑战。