Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/32073
Title: Delivering the aims of the Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care: understanding their strategies and contributions
Authors: Soper, B
Hinrichs, S
Drabble, S
Yaqub, O
Marjanovic, S
Hanney, S
Nolte, E
Issue Date: May-2015
Publisher: National Institute for Health and Care Research
Citation: Soper, B. et al. (2015) 'Delivering the aims of the Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care: understanding their strategies and contributions', Health Services and Delivery Research, 3 (25), pp. i - xxvii, 1 - 208. doi: 10.3310/hsdr03250.
Abstract: Background: In 2008, the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) in England established nine Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRCs) to develop partnerships between universities and local NHS organisations focused on improving patient outcomes through the conduct and application of applied health research. Objectives: The study explored how effectively the CLAHRCs supported the ‘translation’ of research into patient benefit, and developed ways of doing applied research that maximised its chances of being useful to the service and the capacity of the NHS to respond. It focused on three issues: (1) how the NHS influenced the CLAHRCs, and vice versa; (2) how effective multistakeholder and multidisciplinary research and implementation teams were built in the CLAHRCs; (3) how the CLAHRCs supported the use of research knowledge to change commissioning and clinical behaviour for patient benefit. Methods: The study adopted an adaptive and emergent approach and incorporated a formative evaluation. An initial phase mapped the landscape of all nine CLAHRCs and the context within which they were established, using document analysis, workshops and interviews, and a literature review. This mapping exercise identified the three research questions that were explored in phase 2 through a stakeholder survey of six CLAHRCs, in-depth case studies of two CLAHRCs, validation interviews with all nine CLAHRCs and the NIHR, and document review. Results: (1) The local remit and the requirement for matched NHS funding enhanced NHS influence on the CLAHRCs. The CLAHRCs achieved positive change among those most directly involved, but the larger issue of whether or not the CLAHRCs can influence others in and across the NHS remains unresolved. (2) The CLAHRCs succeeded in engaging different stakeholder groups, and explored what encouraged specific groups to become involved. Being responsive to people’s concerns and demonstrating ‘quick wins’ were both important. (3) There was some evidence that academics were becoming more interested in needs-driven research, and that commissioners were seeing the CLAHRCs as a useful source of support. A growing number of completed projects had demonstrated an impact on clinical practice. Conclusions: The CLAHRCs have included NHS decision-makers in research and researchers in service decision-making, and encouraged research-informed practice. All the CLAHRCs (as collaborations) adopted relationship models. However, as the complexities of the challenges they faced became clearer, it became obvious that a focus on multidisciplinary relationships was necessary, but not sufficient on its own. Attention also has to be paid to the systems within and through which these relationships operate. Recommendations for research: Future research should compare areas with an Academic Health Science Network (AHSN) and a CLAHRC with areas with just an AHSN, to understand the difference CLAHRCs make. There should be work on understanding implementation, such as the balancing of rigour and relevance in intervention studies; systemic barriers to and facilitators of implementation; and tailoring improvement interventions. There is also a need to better understand the factors that support the explicit use of research evidence across the NHS, and the processes and mechanisms that support the sustainability and scale-up of implementation projects. Research should place emphasis on examining the role of patient and public involvement in CLAHRCs and of the relation between CLAHRCs and NHS commissioners.
Description: Plain English Summary: Much of the health research that is produced is not used, and opportunities to improve patient care are missed. In 2008 the UK government funded nine collaborative partnerships between universities and local NHS organisations to address this problem. The Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRCs) were asked to improve links between researchers and NHS managers and clinicians. The underlying idea was that, if NHS staff chose what research was done, it would be more useful to them, and they would use it. However, for this to work they needed to know how research could help them and how to get the research they needed. The CLAHRCs therefore encouraged the two groups to work together to achieve the common goal of getting research better used in practice. They also included patients, in whose interests this was being done. Our study explored what the CLAHRCs achieved. The CLAHRCs involved a large number of people from different academic disciplines and NHS backgrounds. We found evidence that mutual understanding increased, and that people found the new challenges exciting. The CLAHRCs provided research training and opportunities for people to learn about research, produced peer-reviewed publications and short evidence summaries for NHS staff, and developed a substantial portfolio of completed research projects, which prompted changes in practice locally and across the NHS. These partnerships built credibility and goodwill, and increased the capacity of academics to respond to the needs of the NHS and the service to absorb and act on research.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/32073
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3310/hsdr03250
ISSN: 2050-4349
Other Identifiers: ORCiD: Stephen Hanney https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7415-5932
Appears in Collections:Health Economics Research Group (HERG)

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