Frontiers in Public Health (Oct 2024)

Barriers and facilitators to dissemination of non-communicable diseases research: a mixed studies systematic review

  • Ana Renda,
  • Ana Renda,
  • Ana Renda,
  • Ana Renda,
  • Heidi Turon,
  • Heidi Turon,
  • Heidi Turon,
  • Heidi Turon,
  • Michelle Lim,
  • Luke Wolfenden,
  • Luke Wolfenden,
  • Luke Wolfenden,
  • Luke Wolfenden,
  • Sam McCrabb,
  • Sam McCrabb,
  • Sam McCrabb,
  • Sam McCrabb,
  • Seán R. O’Connor,
  • Seán R. O’Connor,
  • Meghan Finch,
  • Meghan Finch,
  • Meghan Finch,
  • Natasha Smith,
  • Navdeep Goraya,
  • Cheryce L. Harrison,
  • Shaan Naughton,
  • Alice Grady,
  • Alice Grady,
  • Alice Grady,
  • Alice Grady,
  • Rebecca Hodder,
  • Rebecca Hodder,
  • Rebecca Hodder,
  • Rebecca Hodder,
  • Kathryn Reilly,
  • Kathryn Reilly,
  • Kathryn Reilly,
  • Serene Yoong,
  • Serene Yoong,
  • Serene Yoong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1344907
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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BackgroundThere is a large number of research studies about the prevention of non-communicable diseases (NCD), with findings taking several years to be translated into practice. One reason for this lack of translation is a limited understanding of how to best disseminate NCD research findings to user-groups in a way that is salient and useful. An understanding of barriers and facilitators to dissemination is key to informing the development of strategies to increase dissemination. Therefore, this review aims to identify and synthesise the barriers and facilitators to dissemination of NCD research findings.MethodsA mixed studies systematic review was performed following JBI (formerly known as Joanna Briggs Institute) methodology. The search included articles from January 2000 until May 2021. We conducted a comprehensive search of bibliographic and grey literature of five databases to identify eligible studies. Studies were included if they involved end-users of public health research that were decision-makers in their setting and examined barriers/facilitators to disseminating research findings. Two pairs of reviewers mapped data from included studies against the Framework of Knowledge Translation (FKT) and used a convergent approach to synthesise the data.ResultsThe database search yielded 27,192 reports. Following screening and full text review, 15 studies (ten qualitative, one quantitative and four mixed methods) were included. Studies were conducted in 12 mostly high-income countries, with a total of 871 participants. We identified 12 barriers and 14 facilitators mapped to five elements of the FKT. Barriers related to: (i) the user-group (n = 3) such as not perceiving health as important and (ii) the dissemination strategies (n = 3) such as lack of understanding of content of guidelines. Several facilitators related to dissemination strategies (n = 5) such as using different channels of communication. Facilitators also related to the user-group (n = 4) such as the user-groups’ interest in health and research.ConclusionResearchers and government organisations should consider these factors when identifying ways to disseminate research findings to decision-maker audiences. Future research should aim to build the evidence base on different strategies to overcome these barriers.Systematic review registrationThe protocol of this review was deposited in Open Science Framework (https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/5QSGD).

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