Developing research priorities in Australian primary health care: a focus on nutrition and physical activity
Author(s) -
Lauren Ball,
Katelyn Barnes,
Michael Leveritt,
Lana Mitchell,
Lauren Williams,
Dianne Ball,
Elizabeth Patterson
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
australian journal of primary health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.524
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 1836-7399
pISSN - 1448-7527
DOI - 10.1071/py16068
Subject(s) - population health , health economics , medicine , public health , focus (optics) , community health , primary care , physical activity , primary health care , health care , environmental health , clinical nutrition , government (linguistics) , gerontology , family medicine , nursing , population , economic growth , physical therapy , linguistics , philosophy , physics , optics , economics
Research priority setting is an important component of research planning, particularly when research options exceed available resources. This study identified the research priorities for supporting healthy lifestyle behaviours in the Australian primary healthcare setting. A five-step stakeholder engagement process was undertaken. Ten stakeholder organisations participated in the process, including patient representatives, health professional associations, health educators, researchers, government advisors and policymakers. Each organisation was asked to provide up to three research questions deemed as a priority. Research questions were critically appraised by the project team for answerability, sustainability, effectiveness, potential for translation and potential to affect disease burden. A blinded scoring system was used to rank the appraised questions, with higher scores indicating higher priority (range of scores possible 87-156). Thirteen unique research questions were submitted by stakeholders and achieved a range of scores from 87 to 139 points. The highest scoring research questions focused on: (i) the effectiveness of different health professionals at facilitating healthy lifestyle behaviours; (ii) the effect of health literacy on behaviour change; and (iii) cost-benefit analysis of healthy lifestyle promotion in primary health care. These priorities can be used to ensure future research projects directly align with the needs and preferences of research end-users.
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