Title: Reflections of an editor on research and practice
1Reflections of an editoron research and practice?
- Richard Smith
- Editor, BMJ
- Granada, May 2002
- www.bmj.com/talks
2What I want to talk about
- The disconnect between practice and research
- A rough history of health research in Britain
- A vision of how to improve the connection
- The relation between disease burden and volume of
research - Setting research priorities
3What I want to talk about
- Where does innovation come from?
- Peer review of research
- Measuring the value of research
- Disseminating research
- How to get from research to change?
- Conclusions
4The disconnect between practice and research
- Research is usually funded by the Ministry of
Education, whereas health care and public health
is funded by the Ministry of Health - Research is run by researchers who value basic
science, discovery, and original questions,
thinking, and methodology - The answering of practical questions is seen as
dull, unoriginal, and unimportant in scientific
terms - Nobel prizes go to the discoverers of molecular
mechanisms not those who work out the most cost
effective method for treating incontinence
5The disconnect between practice and research
- There is often no mechanism to transmit the
questions of practitioners (and patients) to
researchers - Scientists are wary of directed research only
scientists can know what is scientifically
important directed research leads nowhere - The results of research do not seem valuable to
practitioners - The idea that doctors are scientists is a myth
6The disconnect between practice and research
- Most practitioners are not competent researchers
- Nor are practitioners sophisticated consumers of
research - Practice is one thing research another.
I make decisions based on my experience and
what clinical experts advise - Health policy makers sometimes boast that they
dont use research results - Evidence based practice is a force for change,
bringing research and practice together
7The disconnect between practice and research
- It must be evidence informed practice not
evidence tyrannised practice - But we realise that fewer than 5 of studies in
medical journals are both valid and relevant to
clinicians or policy makers in most journals
its less than 1 - We have good evidence on perhaps 10 of
treatments and a smaller percentage of questions
about diagnosis, symptoms and signs, and
prognosis - Evidence needed for health management and policy
is even weaker
8A rough history of health research in Britain
- 1900s--independent researchers
- 1930s--Medical Research Council (MRC) begins
- 1940--Pharmaceutical companies begin to do a
great deal of research - 1980--MRC begins some health services research
- 1986--House of Lords realises that the National
Health Service has almost no research capacity
9A rough history of health research in Britain
- 1990--NHS research and development directorate
established - vision is a knowledge based health service
- aim is to spend 3 of NHS turnover on RD
- programme attracts international interest
- 2001--NHS RD programme still there but is less
central than it once was
10Bringing practice and research closer together a
vision
- Patient asks a question to a doctor
- Doctors consults databases on what the evidence
says (Cochrane Library, Clinical Evidence, or an
electronic decision support system) - (Or, increasingly, patient consults the same
knowledge sources as the doctor--besttreatments.or
g) - If there is evidence, patient and doctor discuss
best course of action
11Bringing practice and research closer together a
vision
- If there is no evidence, then a systematic review
may be needed - Or the patient and doctors consult the
meta-register of trials underway - If there is a trial, the patient may enter the
trial (knowing that patients treated in trials do
better than others no matter whether they get the
active treatment) - If there is no trial, then the patient and doctor
register the question with a central database
12Bringing practice and research closer together a
vision
- Trials can then be conducted to answer the
questions that are most important and arising
most commonly - The information sources needed to achieve this
vision exist for questions on treatment - (The culture and the infrastructure do not exist)
- The information sources do not exist for
questions on diagnosis, prognosis, health policy,
and much else--but could be created
13The relationship between disease burden and the
amount of research
- Examples from the US, Africa, and neurology
- The 9010 rule--90 of research is on diseases
affecting 10 of the worlds population - The association is often small some diseases
with a small burden are highly researched,
whereas some with a high burden are poorly
researched
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17A system for prioritising research
- Consider disease burden
- Consider questions generated by patients and
health care providers - Consider possible research gain (what are the
chances that an investment could result in real
advances?) - Incorporate social and professional values
- Britain has had a system along these lines--but
only for NHS RD programme
18Where does innovation come from? Two models
- The linear model curiosity driven
research---applied research---experimental
development---innovation - The market pull model market need---applied
research---experimental development--innovation
19Project Hindsight (1966)
- Examined 20 weapon systems (including Polaris)
- Researchers identified 686 research or
exploratory development events that were
essential for development of the weapons - Only 9 were scientific research (0.3 basic
research) - Only 9 of research conducted in universities
20Project Hindsight (1966)
- Science and technology funds deliberately
invested and managed for defence purposes have
been about one order of magnitude more efficient
in producing useful events than the same amount
of funds invested without specific concern for
defence needs.
21TRACES Study (1968)
- Technology in Retrospect and Critical Events in
Science - Origins of magnetic ferrites, video recorder,
contraceptive pill, electron microscope, and
matrix isolation - Looked back 50 not 20 years, as did Project
Hindsight
22TRACES Study (1968)
- 340 events
- 70 non-mission research, 20 mission oriented,
and 10 development and application - Universities did 75 of non-mission and one third
of mission oriented research
23Comroe and Dripps (1976)
- Julius Comroe, physiologist, and Robert Dripps,
anaesthetist - The top 10 advances in cardiovascular and
pulmonary medicine and surgery in the last 30
years - Around 100 specialists selected the top 10
24Top 10 advances
- Cardiac surgery
- Vascular surgery
- Drug treatment of hypertension
- Medical treatment of myocardial ischaemia
- Cardiac resuscitation
- Oral diuretics
- Intensive care units
- Antibiotics
- New diagnostic methods
- Prevention of polio
25Comroe and Dripps (1976)
- Went back to the dawn of time
- 137 essential bodies of knowledge
- 500 essential or key articles
- 41 not clinically oriented
- 37 basic not clinically oriented
- 25 basic clinically oriented
26Conclusions from studies of innovation
- The sources of innovation are numerous, varied,
and scattered - Both the science push and market pull models of
innovation are oversimplified - Research funders should not put all their eggs in
one basket - Attempts to force more relevant research may
backfire
27Conclusions from studies of innovation
- The coming together of different lines of
research and and scientists from different
disciplines seems to be important - Promoting interdisciplinary research may seed
innovations - Research into research may be beneficial
28Peer review of research
- Research grants are often given after peer review
- Which research will be published is often decided
by peer review - But there are problems with peer review
29Problems with peer review
- A lottery
- A black box
- Ineffective
- Slow
- Expensive
- Biased
- Easily abused
- Cant detect fraud
30Peer review
- But it is hard to find an alternative to peer
review - Its like democracy--the least bad system
- The answer seems to be to improve peer review
with training, openness, blinding, etc
31Measuring the value of research
- The point of health research is to improve health
- But researchers are usually rewarded according to
measures of scientific value - These include the impact factor of the journal in
which they publish--despite there being little or
no correlation for individual authors between the
impact factor of the journal in which they
publish and citations to their articles - There are many other problems with impact
factors--bias towards certain disciplines, US,
methodology data are often unreliable
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33Measuring the value of research
- Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences is
trying to devise a measure of the social impact
of research - Might include publications, software, products,
press coverage, etc - But its not easy to find a reliable measure
34My suggestions for measuring influence/impact
- Level one (the highest) making change happen
- Level two setting the agenda for debate
- Level three leading by example
- Level four being quoted
- Level five being paid attention to
- Level six (the lowest) being known about
35Dissemination of research
- There are tens of thousands of journals
- Millions of studies are published each year
- Most studies are neither valid nor relevant
- Its hard--usually impossible--for clinicians and
policy makers to keep up - There is a need to review research results
systematically
36Dissemination of research
- Evidence based journals--coverage of one off
studies, not put into context - Cochrane Library--treatments only, big gaps,
researcher (not clinician) led questions, complex - Clinical Evidence--treatments only, 160 topics,
400 needed
37Dissemination of research
- Guidelines--cover only some topics, sometimes not
evidence based, go beyond the evidence, tell
people what to do - Appraisals by National Institute of Clinical
Excellence (NICE) --cover only a few topics, must
incorporate evidence, cost, and values,
insufficiently transparents
38From information to change
- Change
- Know how
- Know about
- Information
- Data
39Failures to follow evidence
- Aspirin underused in patients with vascular
disease - ACE inhibitors underused in patients with heart
failure - Inhalational steroids underused in patients with
asthma - Antibiotics overused in patients with upper
respiratory tract infections and acute otitis
media - Enemas, pubic shaving, and episiotomies overused
in women in labour
40From research to change
- We should stop all research for two years and
concentrate instead on implementing what we
already know. - Somebody in, I think, the Lancet quite some time
ago
41From information to change
- Achieving change is hard
- Information on its own rarely changes practice
- Combinations of audit and feedback, computerised
reminders, educational outreach, and interactive
educational sessions will sometimes change
practice
42From information to change
- Interactive learning
- Improvement methods
- Organisational development
- Consultancy
- Just in time information
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44The thing that will save us
- Able to answer highly complex questions
- Connected to a large valid database
- Electronic - portable, fast, and easy to use
- Prompts doctors - in a helpful rather than
demeaning way - Connected to the patient record
- A servant of patients as doctors
- Responds to the need for psychological support
and affirmation
45Conclusions
- Research and practice are currently not well
connected - Its possible to envision how they might be
better connected - Some substantial health problems are poorly
researched, while some smallish problems are
heavily researched - Mechanisms are needed to set priorities in health
research
46Conclusions
- Research into sources of innovation suggests that
different sorts of research in different
circumstances are important - Innovation often comes from interdisciplinary
innovation - Peer review has many problems but can probably be
improved
47Conclusions
- Better methods are needed for measuring the
performance of health researchers - The dissemination of research results is
inadequate, but better means are appearing - Moving from research to change is hard, but we
can see how to do it better