Open access

Introducing the Strategy for Patient Oriented Research (SPOR) Evidence Alliance: a partnership between researchers, patients and health system decision-makers to support rapid-learning and responsive health systems in Canada and beyond

Publication: FACETS
28 April 2022

Abstract

This is the introductory paper in a collection of four papers on the Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR) Evidence Alliance, a pan-Canadian research initiative that was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research in September of 2017. Here, we introduce the SPOR enterprise in Canada, provide a rationale for the creation of the SPOR Evidence Alliance, provide information on the mandate and approach, and describe how the SPOR Evidence Alliance adds to the health research ecosystem in Canada and beyond.

Introduction

This is the introductory paper of a collection of papers that focus on the Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR) Evidence Alliance. The SPOR Evidence Alliance is a pan-Canadian research initiative to increase the engagement of patients and public in the design, development, and implementation of health research. It was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) in September of 2017 (SPOR Evidence Alliance n.d.-g; Tricco 2017). The collection consists of the following papers: this introductory overview, an article outlining the governance structure of the SPOR Evidence Alliance (Lunny et al. 2021), an article providing information on the research services it has provided for decision-makers in Canada and beyond (Zarin et al. 2021), and a final article that focuses on evaluating patient engagement within this initiative (Li et al. 2021). This paper introduces the overall SPOR enterprise in Canada, provides a rationale for the creation of the SPOR Evidence Alliance within the SPOR enterprise with information on its mandate and approach, and describes how the SPOR Evidence Alliance adds to the health research ecosystem in Canada and beyond.

What is SPOR?

The SPOR enterprise is a national strategy facilitated by the CIHR and launched in Canada in September of 2011 (Collier 2011) with funding from the federal government to develop and implement the strategy. The vision and goals of SPOR were developed under the leadership of CIHR with guidance from a 12-member advisory board drawn from across Canada and a series of consultations with federal, territorial, and provincial government officials; academic and health care organizations; health charities; agencies; and professional associations and colleges as well as provincial health research funding agencies (Canadian Institutes of Health Research 2011). These extensive consultations revealed gaps and opportunities for improvement in the capacity, coordination, and funding of patient-oriented research in Canada. The SPOR initiative was “…designed to help provinces and territories meet the challenge of delivering high-quality, cost-effective health care by ensuring that the right patient receives the right treatment at the right time” (cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/44000.html). CIHR’s proposed definition of definition of a patient is “…overarching and inclusive of individuals with personal experience of a health issue and informal caregivers, including family and friends” (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-d). “Patient-oriented research” is defined as “…a continuum of research, from initial studies in humans to comparative effectiveness and outcomes research, and the integration of this research into the health care system and clinical practice” (Canadian Institutes of Health Research 2011).
SPOR consists of multiple collaborative research networks that exist nationally (Supplementary Material S1). Current networks include provincial and territorial SUPPORT Units (Support for People and Patient-Oriented Research and Trials) who to act as local conveners of researchers, policymakers, politicians, health care providers, and patients to address pressing health care issues (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-g); innovative Clinical Trials (iCT) platforms to increase Canadian competitiveness in iCT research (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-c), the SPOR Canadian Data Platform to improve access to health data for health services research in Canada (Health Data Research Network Canada n.d.), the SPOR National Training Entity to facilitate capacity-building in patient-oriented research across Canada (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-f), and the SPOR Evidence Alliance (SPOR Evidence Alliance n.d.-g); the latter is the focus of this paper. These entities were strategically funded to bolster patient-oriented research in Canada.
The SPOR initiative was designed to act as a catalyst to engage patients as partners in research through various mechanisms, such as facilitating research, funding research, and supporting synergies between patients and other decision-makers (such as health care providers, health care managers, policymakers) in research (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-a). The guiding principles of SPOR include involving decision-makers (such as patient and public partners, health care providers, health care managers, policymakers) in all aspects of research (e.g., from question formulation, through the research conduct to dissemination as a coauthor on the completed research); 1:1 matched funding with nonfederal government partners; use of a multi-disciplinary approach; and use of an outcome-driven, performance measurement, and evaluation approach. The SPOR contends that integrating patients, health care providers, and other decision-makers in research will ensure that research focuses on relevant questions and that results are used to inform changes in policy and practice (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-a) and initiate changes to improve health outcomes.

Why create the SPOR Evidence Alliance?

The SPOR Evidence Alliance was established in 2017 to address disparities in the production of decision-maker driven knowledge synthesis, as well as in the development, dissemination, and uptake of guidelines. It was revealed that a concerted, well-resourced, and collective approach was required for knowledge synthesis, knowledge translation, and guideline development and uptake in Canada. CIHR requested proposals in December of 2016 and 175 researchers, trainees, patient/public partners, and other decision-makers collaborated to co-create the SPOR Evidence Alliance vision and proposal, with 41 cash and in-kind sponsors secured as 1:1 matched nonfederal funding partners. The proposal was submitted to the CIHR in May of 2017 and, in September of 2017, it was announced that the SPOR Evidence Alliance (formerly known as the REACH network) was the selected proposal after a rigorous peer-review process involving eight international peer reviewers.

What are the SPOR Evidence Alliance’s values and mandate?

The SPOR Evidence Alliance is grounded in the principles of equity, diversity, and inclusivity, as well as transparency and collaboration. The principles are conceptualized with a focus on the integrated knowledge translation approach (Kothari et al. 2017), whereby decision-makers become equal members of the research team, as well as the SPOR Patient Engagement Framework (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-h), which fosters a climate where patients are meaningfully engaged in all SPOR-related activities. These principles are embedded in all activities that are conducted by the SPOR Evidence Alliance, such as selecting members for committees within our governance structure, identifying members for peer-review panels for our annual seed grant competitions, and priority setting of patient-identified research topics. The SPOR Evidence Alliance leadership operationalizes these principles by always using a growth mindset (i.e., continuous learning) and abundance mindset (i.e., distributing funding and projects in an equitable manner) for all activities. For example, the funding, opportunities, and scientific recognition are shared widely across the SPOR Evidence Alliance. Researchers affiliated with the SPOR Evidence Alliance are expected to engage with decision-makers so that they become active and engaged members of the research team to co-produce research, generating high-quality information that is relevant, timely, and easy to use to support decision-making (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1.
Fig. 1. A visual profile of the SPOR Evidence Alliance.
Regarding the mandate, the specific aims for the SPOR Evidence Alliance are outlined in Box 1.
Box 1. Goals of the SPOR Evidence Alliance
1.
Provide timely responses to the needs of decision-makers (including patients) for evidence to inform health policy and practice changes.
2.
Strengthen partnerships with organizations and individuals who use research by meaningfully involving them in governance, priority setting, the conduct of research and the uptake of research findings.
3.
Improve Canada-wide collaboration and coordination of health research to avoid duplication of research efforts.
4.
Support new researchers and trainees by offering more collaboration, training, and mentorship opportunities.
5.
Create meaningful partnerships with national and international organizations to increase the visibility and uptake of Canadian research.
6.
Make research findings more easily accessible by publishing findings with open access.
7.
Advance the science of four core research methods (knowledge synthesis, knowledge translation, guidelines, patient-oriented research).
8.
Support and strengthen partnerships within the SPOR enterprise.
The SPOR Evidence Alliance welcomes interdisciplinary and diverse members, including knowledge users, patient/public partners, independent researchers, and research trainees. The SPOR Evidence Alliance defines knowledge users as individuals in positions to use research findings to make informed decisions about health policies, programs and (or) practices (e.g., policymakers, health care providers). Patient and public partners are types of knowledge users who play a critical role in the health research ecosystem as consumers of health care. Independent researchers are defined by the SPOR Evidence Alliance as individuals with an independent research appointment at an academic or research institution (e.g., scientist, assistant professor). Trainees are defined by the SPOR Evidence Alliance as graduate students or post-doctoral fellows who work under the formal supervision of an independent researcher. Trainees can become a member of the SPOR Evidence Alliance if their supervisor is also a member. Since inception, the SPOR Evidence Alliance has grown to 342 members at the time of writing this paper (Figs. 2 and 3).
Fig. 2.
Fig. 2. Member distribution of the SPOR Evidence Alliance (N = 342).
Fig. 3.
Fig. 3. Growth of membership by year.
Members of the SPOR Evidence Alliance are provided with opportunities to collaborate on research projects and funding competitions and build linkages with a wide network of researchers, research trainees, patients, and public and other knowledge users across Canada committed to evidence-informed health systems transformation (Fig. 4). They also have access to a monthly newsletter to stay up to date on our latest news, our activities, and various research opportunities. Members can join one of six governance committees and provide guidance on the progress and strategic direction of the SPOR Evidence Alliance (Lunny et al. 2021). Consistent with the SPOR Patient Engagement Framework (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-h), each committee includes at least two patients. Participants are provided the opportunity to lead research projects in response to decision-maker requests received through the query services; this process is outlined in depth in a later article in this collection (Zarin et al. 2021).
Fig. 4.
Fig. 4. Members are engaged across the core functions of the SPOR Evidence Alliance.
The SPOR Evidence Alliance aims to create a culture of learning and innovation that grows, supports, and sustains an environment for patient-oriented research using the SPOR Capacity Development Framework (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-b), which focuses on essential characteristics of training environments (e.g., multidisciplinary mentorship) and career support (e.g., balance and value of clinical and academic goals). Opportunities for professional development provided include access to online courses and learning modules, workshops, and other capacity-building activities. In addition, trainees and early career researchers (i.e., researchers in their first five years of appointment) can participate in an annual seed grant competition, which provides $10,000 CAD for each awarded project (two to four per year; six funded in total at the time of writing this paper) (Supplementary Material S2) (SPOR Evidence Alliance n.d.-a).

Our scientific approach and four core research methods

The SPOR Evidence Alliance specializes in four core research methods, which are described below: patient-oriented research, knowledge synthesis, guideline development, and knowledge translation. Using an integrated knowledge translation approach (Kothari et al. 2017) within each activity, investigators of the SPOR Evidence Alliance answer health-related research queries for policy-makers, health care providers, health care managers patients, and other types of decision-makers who request scientific evidence to inform relevant health policy and practice decisions. The SPOR Evidence Alliance also supports methods studies to advance the science of these core activities, such as through our annual seed grants, methods support that is provided across all queries, methods guidance on patient and public engagement across all activities, and evaluation of these engagements on an ongoing basis. Additionally, training and mentorship opportunities are provided in the four core research methods to new researchers, research staff, decision-makers, and other stakeholders in research.

Core method 1 – Patient-oriented research

The SPOR Evidence Alliance defines patient-oriented research as engaging patients as equal partners in research and focusing on patient-identified priorities to directly improve patient outcomes. Our work is conducted by multidisciplinary teams in partnership with relevant decision-makers and aims to facilitate the ethical application of the evidence to improve health care systems and practices. The SPOR Evidence Alliance follows a robust and inclusive approach using the SPOR Patient Engagement Framework (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-h) that involves patients in all aspects of research, from prioritization of research queries to distribution and application of research findings. Patients and the public are included in all the SPOR Evidence Alliance’s core research activities, leadership, and governance. The SPOR Evidence Alliance uses an evidence-based approach when developing patient and public engagement strategies to accommodate any known barriers and facilitators to participation and ongoing commitment (Tricco et al. 2016; Tricco et al. 2018b; Soobiah et al. 2019).

Core method 2 – Knowledge synthesis

The SPOR Evidence Alliance defines a knowledge synthesis as a systematic summary of important studies on a specific research question. All types of knowledge synthesis are eligible for conduct, such as scoping reviews, rapid reviews, systematic reviews, network meta-analysis, and overviews of reviews (Tricco et al. 2018a). An integrated knowledge translation approach is used for all knowledge syntheses (Kothari et al. 2017). Decision-makers are engaged throughout the entire research process. Engagement of knowledge users in the research project is planned based on the project timelines, available funds, and their interest and availability. Patient and public partners and research trainees/graduate students are always encouraged to be included as members on the project team.

Core method 3 – Guidelines

We define a guideline as an evidence-based statement prepared to help improve the quality and consistency of care for specific clinical conditions or situations. Guidelines incorporate the most current clinical information based on the best available scientific evidence, professional opinions, patient values and preferences, costs, and feasibility of the recommended interventions, into a framework of best practices to promote the best patient outcomes. The goal of the SPOR Evidence Alliance is to support the development of clinical practice guidelines that are more patient-centered and user-friendly using an integrated knowledge translation approach, while avoiding unnecessary duplication of guideline efforts nationally. This involves engagement with all patient and public partners, knowledge users, and stakeholders, such as professional societies, to identify the needs and preferences of the knowledge users by assessing the barriers and facilitators for recommendation uptake (Légaré et al. 2011). Barriers and facilitators are identified through qualitative interviews or focus groups of relevant knowledge users, including patients after the completion of each guideline, guided by theory and evidence (Michie et al. 2008; Phillips et al. 2015). The current best evidence is used to develop more implementable guidelines (Straus et al. 2013).
To facilitate sharing of guidelines across groups in Canada, as well as reduction in duplication, the SPOR Evidence Alliance created a guideline asset map (SPOR Evidence Alliance n.d.-b). This interactive asset map provides an inventory of more than 1,000 guidelines developed by more than 100 guideline developers across Canada. The database was recently used in a study exploring management of conflicts of interest in the development of health guidelines that was published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (Traversy et al. 2021).

Core method 4 – Knowledge translation

The SPOR Evidence Alliance defines knowledge translation as the process of summarizing, distributing, sharing, and applying the knowledge uncovered by researchers to improve the health of Canadians and to strengthen the health care system using services and interventions proven to be effective. Our approach to knowledge translation is to use theory and evidence to tailor the specific dissemination or implementation approach according to the needs of the specific knowledge users. A range of dissemination strategies is used, such as posting preliminary results on preprint servers, publishing in open-access journals, conducting webinars and workshops, and presentations with key stakeholders and the user of tools such as our website, our monthly newsletter, and social media campaigns (e.g., Twitter, @SPORAlliance; LinkedIn). The SPOR Evidence Alliance also holds an annual general meeting to share learnings and foster collaboration.

Our core functions

Governance structure (Lunny et al. 2021)

The SPOR Evidence Alliance approach includes a governance structure, which is described in detail in the second paper in this collection (Lunny et al. 2021). The governance structure is fit-for-purpose; it includes six standing committees and currently consists of 64 members who are researchers, patient and public partners, individuals from other SPOR entities, policymakers, health system managers, and health care providers from across Canada and beyond. Each committee has a specific mandate that is revisited annually and works in a collaborative environment with cross-communication to the other committees. Diverse membership is encouraged based on several factors such as gender, geographic location, official language (English and French), and lived experience. Conflicts of interest are managed using a comprehensive policy that we developed and made available online (SPOR Evidence Alliance 2020).

Query services (Zarin et al. 2021)

The major activity of the SPOR Evidence Alliance is responding to queries from decision-makers at all levels of the health system, as described in detail in the third paper (Zarin et al. 2021). The SPOR Evidence Alliance specializes in supporting decision-makers’ needs for purpose-driven and context-sensitive evidence to inform health policy, health practice, or a health service decision using the four core research methods. Research requests are accepted from decision-makers across Canada and internationally who are seeking evidence to address gaps in their health systems (Table 1). For a research query to be eligible, it must fulfill a set of criteria. It must: (i) involve focused on an aspect of health or the health care system, as defined by the World Health Organization (World Health Organization 2006); (ii) be related to an existing or planned health policy, health practice, or health service decision; (iii) be made by or on behalf of a decision-maker (including health care providers, policymakers, patient partners), and (iv) be capable of being addressed with one of the four core research methods.
Table 1.
Table 1. Methods used to support research requests
Research ApproachDefinition
Knowledge synthesisA knowledge synthesis systematically summarizes all important studies on a specific research question to help make sense of the varying evidence on the topic. It allows health policy and practice decisions to be made based on all available scientific information, rather than a single study or expert opinion, which can be misleading.
GuidelinesA clinical practice guideline is an evidence-based or consensus-based statement prepared to help improve the quality and consistency of care for specific clinical conditions or situations. They incorporate the most current clinical information based on all available scientific evidence and professional opinions into a framework of best practices to promote the best patient outcomes.
Knowledge translationKnowledge translation is the process of summarizing, distributing, sharing, and applying the knowledge uncovered by researchers to improve the health of Canadians, and strengthen the health care system through the use of services and interventions proven to be more effective.
Over our first four years of full operation (following the time required to set up the research query service), 148 queries have been submitted to the SPOR Evidence Alliance, with 94 addressed, 30 in progress, six currently undergoing prioritization, and 24 withdrawn or ineligible. As COVID-19 emerged, we pivoted to help provide knowledge users with evidence on 22 pandemic-related queries in collaboration with COVID-END (COVID-END n.d.), another pan-Canadian, CIHR initiative. For every completed project, a questionnaire is sent to the decision-maker who commissioned the research, and their feedback is used to continuously improve our processes.

Patient and public engagement (Li et al. 2021)

A key tenet of the SPOR Evidence Alliance’s approach is patient and public engagement, which has been evaluated in the fourth paper (Li et al. 2021). Patient and public partners are engaged in all levels of the SPOR Evidence Alliance. They are invited as co-chairs of governance committees, as well as members of the various committees. Patient and public partners are engaged as members of the research teams that answer the research queries. Any patient or member of the public from Canada can also submit queries for research topics that are prioritized annually. Adequate support and flexibility are provided to ensure patient and public partners can meaningfully contribute to discussions and decisions. This support system includes creating welcoming environments that promote honest interactions, cultural competencies, training, and education, as well as offering fair financial compensation for time and contribution based on a policy co-created with patient and public partners (SPOR Evidence Alliance n.d.-f; Hamilton et al. 2018). Several training opportunities are provided, such as a three-week course on the production of rapid reviews, and webinars with researchers on how to effectively engage on the relevance of the research proposals.

What does the SPOR Evidence Alliance add to the health research ecosystem?

The SPOR Evidence Alliance contributes to Canada’s health research ecosystem by providing a service to decision-makers answering important health and systems related research questions through our four core research methods described above. Other similar types of pan-Canadian initiatives exist in Canada. Examples include those that are not as broad as the SPOR Evidence Alliance, each being predominantly focused on knowledge translation capacity-building (e.g., Knowledge Translation Canada (n.d.)), or systematic reviews (e.g., Cochrane Canada (n.d.)), or knowledge synthesis on drug safety and effectiveness topics for specific knowledge users (e.g., Drug Safety and Effectiveness Network Methods and Applications Group for Indirect Comparisons (n.d.)), or rapid inventories completed within 2–3 hours on health system topics (e.g., RISE (Rapid Improvement Support and Exchange n.d.)), or rapid reviews specific to COVID-19 (e.g., COVID-END (n.d.)). Internationally, research initiatives with similar principles include the Agency for Health Research and Quality (n.d.), Joanna Briggs Institute (n.d.), Cochrane (n.d.), the Campbell Collaboration (n.d.) and National Institute for Health Research Applied Research Collaboration (National Institute of Health Research n.d.). The SPOR Evidence Alliance is broad regarding the types of queries completed, research approaches, focus on capacity-building, connections between knowledge users and researchers, and the breadth of decision-makers who can access these services. The breadth of our collaborative approach can be seen as a major strength of the SPOR Evidence Alliance.
The SPOR Evidence Alliance also promotes team-based science and provides a model for collaboration and support. Seventeen main knowledge synthesis and knowledge translation teams are included across Canada, and linkages between these teams and our 58 knowledge user members are facilitated. Transparency in communicating the methods and results of projects, using reporting guidelines, is supported. Similarly, the SPOR Evidence Alliance advocates for best open science practices, such as prospective registration of protocols and making completed reports available in an open access platform. Furthermore, the SPOR Evidence Alliance adheres to CIHR’s sex- and gender-based analysis policy (Canadian Institutes of Health Research n.d.-e) by ensuring sex and gender are considered in all activities, such as ensuring adequate representation of sex and gender across committees and ensuring that sex and gender is considered across all projects and is analyzed appropriately.

Impact of the SPOR Evidence Alliance

Across the 124 queries, knowledge users (e.g., policymakers, health care providers) were engaged in 194 occurrences, patient partners were engaged in 180 occurrences, and graduate students and research trainees were engaged in 95 occurrences (note: count data based on frequency of occurrences, as individual's names are not collected due to privacy concerns). The first query was completed in November of 2018. Patient partners were included in 39% and trainees were included in 51% of the 124 queries (SPOR Evidence Alliance n.d.-d). Multiple projects were coordinated across different geographic regions (e.g., nationally and multiple provinces), reducing duplication across Canada. This has resulted in 104 reports, 34 peer-reviewed publications/submissions, and 109 other knowledge products such as power point presentations, one-page briefs, blog posts, op-eds, and infographics. The goal is that all projects are made available on the SPOR Evidence Alliance website (SPOR Evidence Alliance n.d.-c; SPOR Evidence Alliance n.d.-e). Across our 34 capacity-building initiatives over the past 3 years, 1,338 learners were reached. This has also resulted in collaborations on an additional 40 peer-reviewed grants with investigators across Canada, 3 are awaiting a decision, and 27 of which were successfully funded.
After each query is completed, surveys are emailed to the decision-maker who submitted the query. Across the surveys completed, 100% agreed or strongly agreed that they received timely responses to their questions throughout the process from the research team, 80% agreed or strongly agreed that they received regular updates from the research team, 100% agreed or strongly agreed they were able to provide their feedback freely to the research team with 90% agreeing or strongly agreeing that their feedback was heard, 100% agreed or strongly agreed that the final deliverable was of high quality, and 100% were overall satisfied with the query service overall. Additional impact stories of the SPOR Evidence Alliance are provided in Zarin et al. (2021).
In summary, the SPOR Evidence Alliance has achieved many successes since beginning its operations in September of 2017. The SPOR Evidence Alliance will be evaluated later in 2022 using a summative evaluation approach. The results of this evaluation will be used to further strengthen the SPOR Evidence Alliance, as well as to develop a strategy for sustainability beyond the grant funding period.

Funding

The SPOR Evidence Alliance is supported by the CIHR under the SPOR initiative (grant number GSR-154442), and the generosity of partners from 41 public and not-for-profit agencies across Canada. SES is funded by a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Knowledge Translation. ACT is funded by a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Knowledge Synthesis. LCL is funded by a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Patient-oriented Knowledge Translation. DM is funded by a University of Ottawa Research Chair.

Acknowledgments

We gratefully acknowledge Sinit Michael for referencing and providing logistical support in the preparation of this manuscript.

References

Agency for Health Research and Quality. n.d. AHRQ [online]: Available from: ahrq.gov/.
Campbell Collaboration. n.d. Campbell collaboration [online]: Available from: campbellcollaboration.org/.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research. 2011. Canada’s strategy for patient-oriented research: improving health outcomes through evidence-informed care [online]: Available from: cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/44000.html.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research. n.d.-a. About SPOR [online]: Available from: cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/51036.html.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research. n.d.-b. Capacity development framework [online]: Available from: cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/49307.html.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research. n.d.-c. Innovative clinical trials initiative [online]: Available from: cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/49773.html.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research. n.d.-d. Patient engagement [online]: Available from: cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/45851.html.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research. n.d.-e. Sex and gender in health research [online]: Available from: cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/50833.html.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research. n.d.-f. SPOR capacity development initiative [online]: Available from: cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/51465.html.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research. n.d.-g. SPOR SUPPORT units [online]: Available from: cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/45859.html.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research. n.d.-h. Strategy for patient-oriented research – patient engagement framework [online]: Available from: cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/48413.html.
Cochrane. n.d. Cochrane [online]: Available from: cochrane.org/.
Cochrane Canada. n.d. Cochrane Canada [online]: Available from: canada.cochrane.org/.
Collier R. 2011. Federal government unveils patient-oriented research strategy. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 183(13): E993–E994.
COVID-END. n.d. COVID-19 Evidence network to support decision-making (COVID-END) [online]: Available from: mcmasterforum.org/networks/covid-end.
Drug Safety and Effectiveness Network Methods and Applications Group for Indirect Comparisons. n.d. DSEN MAGIC [online]: Available from: dsenmagic.com/.
Hamilton CB, Hoens AM, McQuitty S, McKinnon AM, English K, Backman CL, et al. 2018. Development and pre-testing of the Patient Engagement In Research Scale (PEIRS) to assess the quality of engagement from a patient perspective. PLoS One, 13(11): e0206588.
Health Data Research Network Canada. n.d. Health data research network Canada [online]: Available from: hdrn.ca/en.
Joanna Briggs Institute. n.d. Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) [online]: Available from: jbi.global/.
Knowledge Translation Canada. n.d. Knowledge translation (KT) Canada [online]: Available from: ktcanada.org/.
Kothari A, McCutcheon C, and Graham ID. 2017. Defining integrated knowledge translation and moving forward: a response to recent commentaries. International Journal of Health Policy and Management, 6(5): 299–300.
Légaré F, Boivin A, van der Weijden T, Pakenham C, Burgers J, Légaré J, et al. 2011. Patient and public involvement in clinical practice guidelines: a knowledge synthesis of existing programs. Medical Decision Making, 31(6): E45–E74.
Li LC, Hoens AM, Wilhelm L, Bubber V, PausJenssen E, McKinnon A, et al. 2021. Patient engagement in the SPOR evidence alliance: reflection and learnings. Strategy for Patient Oriented Research (SPOR) Evidence Alliance: A Canadian Model to Build Rapid-learning Health Systems. FACETS. 7: 126–138.
Lunny C, Zarin W, Chaudhry S, Thomas SM, LeBlanc A, Desroches S, et al. 2021. An inclusive and diverse governance structure of the strategy for patient-oriented research (SPOR) evidence alliance. Strategy for Patient Oriented Research (SPOR) Evidence Alliance: A Canadian Model to Build Rapid-learning Health Systems. FACETS. 7: 435–447.
Michie S, Johnston M, Francis J, Hardeman W, and Eccles M. 2008. From theory to intervention: mapping theoretically derived behavioural determinants to behaviour change techniques Applied Psychology, 57(4): 660–680.
National Institute of Health Research. n.d. NIHR applied research collaborations [online]: Available from: nihr.ac.uk/explore-nihr/support/collaborating-in-applied-health-research.htm#one.
Phillips CJ, Marshall AP, Chaves NJ, Jankelowitz SK, Lin IB, Loy CT, et al. 2015. Experiences of using the theoretical domains framework across diverse clinical environments: a qualitative study. Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare, 8: 139–146.
Rapid Improvement Support and Exchange. n.d. RISE [online]: Available from: mcmasterforum.org/rise.
Soobiah C, Straus SE, Manley G, Marr S, Paus Jenssen E, Teare S, et al. 2019. Engaging knowledge users in a systematic review on the comparative effectiveness of geriatrician-led models of care is possible: a cross-sectional survey using the Patient Engagement Evaluation Tool. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 113: 58–63.
SPOR Evidence Alliance. 2020. Conflict of interest disclosure policy. SPOR Evidence Alliance. 6 p.
SPOR Evidence Alliance. n.d.-a. Advancing science [online]: Available from: sporevidencealliance.ca/key-activities/advancing-science/.
SPOR Evidence Alliance. n.d.-b. Asset map of Canadian clinical practice guideline developers [online]: Available from: sporevidencealliance.ca/key-activities/cpg-asset-map/.
SPOR Evidence Alliance. n.d.-c. COVID-19 evidence synthesis [online]: Available from: sporevidencealliance.ca/key-activities/covid-19-evidence-synthesis/.
SPOR Evidence Alliance. n.d.-d. Our projects [online]: Available from: sporevidencealliance.ca/research-2/projects/.
SPOR Evidence Alliance. n.d.-e. Our reports [online]: Available from: sporevidencealliance.ca/about/reports/.
SPOR Evidence Alliance. n.d.-f. Policies & procedures [online]: Available from: sporevidencealliance.ca/about/policies-procedures/.
SPOR Evidence Alliance. n.d.-g. SPOR evidence alliance [online]: Available from: sporevidencealliance.ca/.
Straus SE, Tetroe J, and Graham ID. 2013. Knowledge translation in health care: moving from evidence to practice. 2nd ed. Wiley.
Traversy G, Barnieh L, Akl EA, Allan GM, Brouwers M, Ganache I, et al. 2021. Managing conflicts of interest in the development of health guidelines. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 193(2): E49–e54.
Tricco A. 2017. SPOR evidence alliance protocol [online]: Available from: osf.io/zfskh/.
Tricco AC, Cardoso R, Thomas SM, Motiwala S, Sullivan S, Kealey MR, et al. 2016. Barriers and facilitators to uptake of systematic reviews by policy makers and health care managers: a scoping review. Implement Sci, 11: 4.
Tricco AC, Zarin W, Ghassemi M, Nincic V, Lillie E, Page MJ, et al. 2018a. Same family, different species: methodological conduct and quality varies according to purpose for five types of knowledge synthesis. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 96: 133–142.
Tricco AC, Zarin W, Rios P, Nincic V, Khan PA, Ghassemi M, et al. 2018b. Engaging policy-makers, health system managers, and policy analysts in the knowledge synthesis process: a scoping review. Implement Science, 13(1): 31.
World Health Organization. 2006. Constitution of the World Health Organization. 45th ed.
Zarin W, Lunny C, Chaudhry S, Thomas SM, LeBlanc A, Clement F, et al. 2021. A Canadian model for providing high-quality, timely and relevant evidence to meet health system decision-maker needs: the SPOR evidence alliance. Strategy for Patient Oriented Research (SPOR) Evidence Alliance: A Canadian Model to Build Rapid-learning Health Systems. FACETS. 7: 420-434. https://doi.org/10.1139/facets-2021-0132

Supplementary material

Supplementary Material 1

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

cover image FACETS
FACETS
Volume 7Number 1January 2022
Pages: 639 - 653
Editor: Debra Clendinneng

History

Received: 26 August 2021
Accepted: 10 January 2022
Version of record online: 28 April 2022

Notes

This paper is part of a collection titled “Strategy for Patient Oriented Research (SPOR) Evidence Alliance: A Canadian Model to Build Rapid-learning Health Systems”.

Data Availability Statement

The data and materials used and (or) analysed during this study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Key Words

  1. patient-oriented research
  2. patient engagement
  3. health research
  4. knowledge translation

Sections

Subjects

Authors

Affiliations

Andrea C. Tricco [email protected]
Knowledge Translation Program, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, 209 Victoria Street, East Building, Toronto, ON M5B 1T8, Canada
Epidemiology Division, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, 155 College Street, 6th floor, Toronto, ON M5T 3M7, Canada
Queen’s Collaboration for Health Care Quality: A JBI Centre of Excellence, School of Nursing, Queen’s University, 92 Barrie Street, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
Wasifa Zarin
Knowledge Translation Program, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, 209 Victoria Street, East Building, Toronto, ON M5B 1T8, Canada
Fiona Clement
Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, 3280 Hospital Dr NW, Calgary, AB T2N 4N6, Canada
Ahmed M. Abou-Setta
George & Fay Yee Centre for Healthcare Innovation, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, 367-753 McDermot Ave, Winnipeg, MB R3E 0T6, Canada
Janet A. Curran
School of Nursing, Faculty of Health, Dalhousie University, 5869 University Ave, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada
Annie LeBlanc
VITAM Research Center on Sustainable Health, CIUSSS de la Capitale Nationale, Quebec City, QC G1J 0A4, Canada
Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Université Laval, 1050 Avenue de la Médecine, Quebec City, QC G1V 0A6, Canada
Linda C Li
Department of Physical Therapy, University of British Columbia, 2177 Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3, Canada
Arthritis Research Canada, 230 – 2238 Yukon Street, Vancouver, BC V5Y 3P2, Canada
Christina Godfrey
Queen’s Collaboration for Health Care Quality: A JBI Centre of Excellence, School of Nursing, Queen’s University, 92 Barrie Street, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
Pertice Moffitt
North Slave Research Centre, Aurora College, Bag 9700, 5004-54th St, Yellowknife, NT X1A 2R3, Canada
David Moher
Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, 1053 Carling Ave, Ottawa, ON K1Y 4E9, Canada
School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, 600 Peter Morand Crescent, Ottawa, ON K1G 5Z3, Canada
Heather Colquhoun
Department of Occupational Science & Occupational Therapy, University of Toronto, 500 University Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1V7, Canada
Ian D. Graham
School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, 600 Peter Morand Crescent, Ottawa, ON K1G 5Z3, Canada
Centre for Practice-Changing Research, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, 501 Smyth Road, Box 711, Ottawa, ON K1H 8L6, Canada
Ivan D. Florez
Department of Pediatrics, University of Antioquia, Medellin, Colombia
School of Rehab Science, McMaster University, 1400 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON, L8S 1C7, Canada
Linda Wilhelm
The Canadian Arthritis Patient Alliance, Canada
Wanrudee Isaranuwatchaia
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, 155 College Street, 6th floor, Toronto, ON M5T 3M7, Canada
Jackie Mann
Askatchewan Centre for Patient-Oriented Research, University of Saskatchewan, 107 Wiggins Rd, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5E5, Canada
Marina Hamilton
Maritime SPOR SUPPORT Unit, 5790 University Avenue, Halifax, NS B3H 1V7, Canada
Vasanthi Srinivasan
Ontario SPOR SUPPORT Unit, MaRS Centre, West Tower, 405-661 University Avenue, Toronto, ON M5G 1M1, Canada
Stephen Bornstein
Division of Community Health and Humanities, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University, 300 Prince Philip Dr, St. John’s, NL A1B 3V6, Canada
Sharon E. Straus
Knowledge Translation Program, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, 209 Victoria Street, East Building, Toronto, ON M5B 1T8, Canada

Author Contributions

ACT, FC, AMA-S, JAC, AL, LCL, CG, PM, DM, HC, IDG, IDF, WI, SB, and SES conceived and designed the study.
All performed the experiments/collected the data.
All analyzed and interpreted the data.
ACT, FC, AMA-S, JAC, AL, LCL, CG, PM, DM, HC, IDG, IDF, WI, SB, and SES contributed resources.
All drafted or revised the manuscript.

Competing Interests

All authors have nothing to declare.

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Other Metrics

Citations

Cite As

Export Citations

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

Cited by

1. Public and professional involvement in a systematic review investigating the impact of occupational therapy on the self-management of rheumatoid arthritis
2. Recent innovations in long-term care coverage and financing: a rapid scoping review
3. Recommended characteristics and processes for writing lay summaries of healthcare evidence: a co-created scoping review and consultation exercise
4. Researcher-patient partnership generated actionable recommendations, using quantitative evaluation and deliberative dialogue, to improve meaningful engagement
5. A patient-oriented workshop on sexual pain and endometriosis: Preliminary evidence for improvements in painful intercourse self-efficacy
6. The dynamic nature of patient engagement within a Canadian patient‐oriented kidney health research network: Perspectives of researchers and patient partners
7. How “gutsy” does an organization have to be to absorb new information?
8. Supporting patient and public partners in writing lay summaries of scientific evidence in healthcare: a scoping review protocol
9. An inclusive and diverse governance structure of the strategy for patient-oriented research (SPOR) Evidence Alliance
10. A Canadian model for providing high-quality, timely and relevant evidence to meet health system decision-maker needs: the SPOR Evidence Alliance

View Options

View options

PDF

View PDF

Get Access

Media

Media

Other

Tables

Share Options

Share

Share the article link

Share on social media