TY - JOUR
T1 - Beyond the evidence-based practice paradigm to achieve best practice in rehabilitation medicine
T2 - a clinical review
AU - Groah, Suzanne L.
AU - Libin, Alexander
AU - Lauderdale, Manon
AU - Kroll, Thilo
AU - DeJong, Gerben
AU - Hsieh, Jean
N1 - dc.publisher: Elsevier
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Best practice is a practice that, on rigorous evaluation, demonstrates success, has had an impact, and can be replicated. It is differentiated from its constituent parts, evidence-based practice and knowledge translation, by its general meaning and global purview. The purpose of this clinical review is to provide transparency to the concept and achievement of best practice in the context of rehabilitation medicine. The authors will review and analyze the roles of evidence-based practice and knowledge translation in rehabilitation medicine as they work to support best practice. Challenge areas will be discussed, including an evidential hierarchy in need of update, a lack of “high-level” research evidence, and delays in translating evidence to practice. Last, the authors will argue that rehabilitation medicine is well-positioned to effect change by promoting inclusion of emerging research methodologies and analytic techniques that better capture context-specific rehabilitation evidence, into the evidential hierarchy. Achieving best practice is dependent on this, as well as alignment of all key stakeholders, ranging from the patient, researchers and clinicians, to policymakers, payers, and others.
AB - Best practice is a practice that, on rigorous evaluation, demonstrates success, has had an impact, and can be replicated. It is differentiated from its constituent parts, evidence-based practice and knowledge translation, by its general meaning and global purview. The purpose of this clinical review is to provide transparency to the concept and achievement of best practice in the context of rehabilitation medicine. The authors will review and analyze the roles of evidence-based practice and knowledge translation in rehabilitation medicine as they work to support best practice. Challenge areas will be discussed, including an evidential hierarchy in need of update, a lack of “high-level” research evidence, and delays in translating evidence to practice. Last, the authors will argue that rehabilitation medicine is well-positioned to effect change by promoting inclusion of emerging research methodologies and analytic techniques that better capture context-specific rehabilitation evidence, into the evidential hierarchy. Achieving best practice is dependent on this, as well as alignment of all key stakeholders, ranging from the patient, researchers and clinicians, to policymakers, payers, and others.
U2 - 10.1016/j.pmrj.2009.06.001
DO - 10.1016/j.pmrj.2009.06.001
M3 - Article
SN - 1934-1482
VL - 1
SP - 941
EP - 950
JO - PM&R: The Journal of Injury Function and Rehabilitation
JF - PM&R: The Journal of Injury Function and Rehabilitation
IS - 10
ER -