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Systematic overviews of partnership principles and strategies identified from health research about spinal cord injury and related health conditions: A scoping review

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posted on 2022-03-09, 16:40 authored by Femke Hoekstra, Francisca Trigo, Kathryn M. Sibley, Ian D. Graham, Michael Kennefick, Kelly J. Mrklas, Tram Nguyen, Mathew Vis-Dunbar, Heather L. Gainforth

Scoping review.

To identify and provide systematic overviews of partnership principles and strategies identified from health research about spinal cord injury (SCI) and related health conditions.

Four health electronic databases (Medline, Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO) were searched from inception to March 2019. We included articles that described, reflected, and/or evaluated one or more collaborative research activities in health research about SCI, stroke, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, amputation, cerebral palsy, spina bifida, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, acquired brain injury, or wheelchair-users. Partnership principles (i.e. norms or values) and strategies (i.e. observable actions) were extracted and analyzed using directed qualitative content analysis.

We included 39 articles about SCI (n = 13), stroke (n = 15), multiple sclerosis (n = 5), amputation (n = 2), cerebral palsy (n = 2), Parkinson’s disease (n = 1), and wheelchair users (n = 1). We extracted 110 principles and synthesized them into 13 overarching principles. Principles related to building and maintaining relationships between researchers and research users were most frequently reported. We identified 32 strategies that could be applied at various phases of the research process and 26 strategies that were specific to a research phase (planning, conduct, or dissemination).

We provided systematic overviews of principles and strategies for research partnerships. These could be used by researchers and research users who want to work in partnership to plan, conduct and/or disseminate their SCI research. The findings informed the development of the new SCI Integrated Knowledge Translation Guiding Principles (www.iktprinciples.com) and will support the implementation of these Principles within the SCI research system.

Funding

This research is supported in part by the IKTR Network Canadian Institutes of Health Research Foundation Grant (FDN #143237), a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Project Grant (FRN: 156372), a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Scholar Award for HG (Scholar Award #16910), and by the International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries (F17–01540). KMS is supported by a Canada Research Chair in Integrated Knowledge Translation in Rehabilitation Sciences. None of the funding bodies had a role in writing this manuscript, or in data collection, analysis or interpretation of the data.

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