Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, London, ON, Canada.
WE-SPARK Health Institute, Windsor, ON, Canada.
J Transl Med. 2021 Nov 27;19(1):479. doi: 10.1186/s12967-021-03097-6.
Translational research is an ideology focussed on streamlining the transition of novel research into clinical practice to ultimately benefit populations. Central to this approach is overcoming barriers to research involvement and interdisciplinary collaboration. Identifying barriers has been the subject of several studies focused on communities with large academic hospitals. The Windsor-Essex region is currently built around community hospitals which have less of an emphasis on research, employ fewer physicians holding academic appointments and generally do not provide incentivised time for research and training. In this study, we surveyed clinicians and researchers working in Windsor-Essex to gain insight into barriers to translational research important to those working in smaller sized, community-based research networks.
Using an anonymous close-ended Qualtrics survey distributed via email, we surveyed faculty members from The University of Windsor and clinical care providers from Windsor-Essex (n = 68). This included 24 physicians, 14 allied health professionals, and 30 non-clinician researchers.
Managing competing interests, lack of time, funding, infrastructure, and networks were identified by greater than 75% of participants as barriers to research involvement. 62% of physicians identified the lack of permanent post-graduate medical trainees as a barrier. Clinicians were consistently less experienced in research skills compared to others; particularly in publishing results and applying for funding (p < 0.001). Schedule incompatibility, funding issues and identifying interested collaborators with overlapping interests were identified as barriers to interdisciplinary collaboration by 80% of participants. Moreover, 46% of those surveyed were unhappy with their research involvement and these individuals were 13% more likely to perceive research as important for their career progression (p = 0.244).
This study identifies several important barriers to translational research in Windsor-Essex and suggests that many motivated researchers are unhappy with their current involvement. These results will inform decision making in the research community of Windsor-Essex and provides insight for communities of similar size and research capacity. Ultimately, enabling the translation of clinical research in all communities is required to ensure equitable access to cutting edge care.
转化研究是一种专注于简化将新研究转化为临床实践的理念,最终使人群受益。这种方法的核心是克服研究参与和跨学科合作的障碍。已经有几项研究针对拥有大型学术医院的社区来确定这些障碍。温莎-埃塞克斯地区目前以社区医院为基础,这些医院对研究的重视程度较低,雇用的具有学术任命的医生较少,通常不为研究和培训提供激励时间。在这项研究中,我们调查了在温莎-埃塞克斯工作的临床医生和研究人员,以深入了解对在规模较小的基于社区的研究网络中工作的人而言重要的转化研究障碍。
我们使用匿名的封闭式 Qualtrics 调查通过电子邮件分发给温莎大学的教职员工和温莎-埃塞克斯的临床护理提供者(n=68)。这包括 24 名医生、14 名联合保健专业人员和 30 名非临床研究人员。
管理竞争利益、缺乏时间、资金、基础设施和网络被超过 75%的参与者认为是参与研究的障碍。62%的医生认为缺乏永久性研究生医学培训生是一个障碍。与其他人相比,临床医生在研究技能方面的经验始终较少;特别是在发表研究结果和申请资金方面(p<0.001)。时间表不兼容、资金问题以及找到具有重叠利益的感兴趣的合作者被 80%的参与者视为跨学科合作的障碍。此外,46%的调查对象对他们的研究参与度不满意,这些人认为研究对他们的职业发展更重要的可能性增加了 13%(p=0.244)。
本研究确定了温莎-埃塞克斯转化研究中的几个重要障碍,并表明许多有动力的研究人员对他们目前的参与度不满意。这些结果将为温莎-埃塞克斯的研究社区的决策提供信息,并为类似规模和研究能力的社区提供见解。最终,需要使所有社区的临床研究都能够转化,以确保公平获得尖端护理。