Stats
Seventeen years between research and practice (November 2, 2005)
Category: Teaching Resources
I attended an excellent talk by one of the nurses at CMH on the problems
with implementing quality improvement initiatives in health care. She cited
an interesting statistics, that it takes an average of 17 years for research
findings to be implemented in clinical practice. I asked her for the source
of this statistic, and she found several references to an article by Balas
and Boren:
- Managing clinical knowledge for health care improvement. Balas
EA, Boren SA. In: Yearbook of Medical Informatics 2000: Patient-Centered
Systems. Stuttgart, Germany: Schattauer; 2000:65-70.
I don't have access to this article, but one publication that I do have
provides a bit more detail about this statistic.
There has been increasing concern in the last few years about the
failure of research findings to rapidly affect clinical practice. This
failure has highlighted the difficulties clinicians encounter when trying
to implement new approaches in their practices and the relative
ineffectiveness of traditional methods such as continuing medical education
and journal publications for disseminating new medical information. Using
the results of a number of published studies, Balas and Boren estimated
that it takes an average of 17 years to turn 14% of original research
findings into changes in care that benefit patients. Primary care
practice-based research networks: working at the interface between research
and quality improvement. Mold JW, Peterson KA. Ann Fam Med 2005: 3
Suppl 1; S12-20.
[Medline]
[Abstract]
[Full
text]
[PDF]
This is a rather interesting statistic, and I can think of many
counterexamples where research results led to very rapid changes in clinical
practice. I can also think of examples that support this particular
statistic. I would be very curious to find out if there is any additional
research that would provide empirical support for this statistic.
07/08/2008.