Back to Search Start Over

Bridging the gap between research, policy, and practice: Lessons learned from academic–public partnerships in the CTSA network

Authors :
Amytis Towfighi
Allison Zumberge Orechwa
Tomás J. Aragón
Marc Atkins
Arleen F. Brown
Jen Brown
Olveen Carrasquillo
Savanna Carson
Paula Fleisher
Erika Gustafson
Deborah K. Herman
Moira Inkelas
Wylie Liu
Daniella Meeker
Tara Mehta
Doriane C. Miller
Rachelle Paul-Brutus
Michael B. Potter
Sarah S. Ritner
Brendaly Rodriguez
Dana Rusch
Anne Skinner
Hal F. Yee
Source :
Journal of Clinical and Translational Science, Vol 4, Pp 201-208 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2020.

Abstract

A primary barrier to translation of clinical research discoveries into care delivery and population health is the lack of sustainable infrastructure bringing researchers, policymakers, practitioners, and communities together to reduce silos in knowledge and action. As National Institutes of Healthʼs (NIH) mechanism to advance translational research, Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) awardees are uniquely positioned to bridge this gap. Delivering on this promise requires sustained collaboration and alignment between research institutions and public health and healthcare programs and services. We describe the collaboration of seven CTSA hubs with city, county, and state healthcare and public health organizations striving to realize this vision together. Partnership representatives convened monthly to identify key components, common and unique themes, and barriers in academic–public collaborations. All partnerships aligned the activities of the CTSA programs with the needs of the city/county/state partners, by sharing resources, responding to real-time policy questions and training needs, promoting best practices, and advancing community-engaged research, and dissemination and implementation science to narrow the knowledge-to-practice gap. Barriers included competing priorities, differing timelines, bureaucratic hurdles, and unstable funding. Academic–public health/health system partnerships represent a unique and underutilized model with potential to enhance community and population health.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20598661
Volume :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Clinical and Translational Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b991d51ab2c41a7af13de1d30078e5d
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/cts.2020.23