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Impact assessment of the Centre for Research Excellence in Stroke Rehabilitation and Brain Recovery

Authors :
Shanthi Ramanathan
Elizabeth Lynch
Julie Bernhardt
Michael Nilsson
Dominique A. Cadilhac
Leeanne Carey
Sandy Middleton
Jan Chamberlain
Frederick Rohan Walker
Penny Reeves
Andrew Searles
Source :
Health Research Policy and Systems. 21
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Background Research impact is an emerging measure of research achievement alongside traditional academic outputs such as publications. We present the results of applying the Framework to Assess the Impact from Translational health research (FAIT) to the Centre for Research Excellence (CRE) in Stroke Rehabilitation and Brain Recovery (CRE-Stroke, 2014–2019) and report on the feasibility and lessons from the application of FAIT to a CRE rather than a discrete research project. Methods Data were gathered via online surveys, in-depth interviews, document analysis and review of relevant websites/databases to report on the three major FAIT methods: the modified Payback Framework, an assessment of costs against monetized consequences, and a narrative account of the impact generated from CRE-Stroke activities. FAIT was applied during the last 4 years of CRE-Stroke operation. Results With an economic investment of AU$ 3.9 million over 5 years, CRE-Stroke delivered a return on investment that included AU$ 18.8 million in leveraged grants, fellowships and consultancies. Collectively, CRE-Stroke members produced 354 publications that were accessed 470,000 times and cited over 7220 times. CRE-Stroke supported 26 PhDs, 39 postdocs and seven novice clinician researchers. There were 59 capacity-building events benefiting 744 individuals including policy-makers and consumers. CRE-Stroke created research infrastructure (including a research register of stroke survivors and a brain biobank), and its global leadership produced international consensus recommendations to influence the stroke research landscape worldwide. Members contributed to the Australian Living Stroke Guidelines: four researchers’ outputs were directly referenced. Based only on the consequences that could be monetized, CRE-Stroke returned AU$ 4.82 for every dollar invested in the CRE. Conclusion This case example in the developing field of impact assessment illustrates how researchers can use evidence to demonstrate and report the impact of and returns on research investment. The prospective application of FAIT by a dedicated research impact team demonstrated impact in broad categories of knowledge-gain, capacity-building, new infrastructure, input to policy and economic benefits. The methods can be used by other research teams to provide comprehensive evidence to governments and other research funders about what has been generated from their research investment but requires dedicated resources to complete.

Subjects

Subjects :
Health Policy

Details

ISSN :
14784505
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Health Research Policy and Systems
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1fb1c05f78171b93c75ca07851672524
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-023-00974-y