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Radiographers' involvement in research activities and opinions on radiography research : A Nordic survey

Saukko, E ; Andersson, B T LU ; Bolejko, A LU ; Debess, J ; Fridell, K ; Henner, A ; Mussmann, B R and Sanderud, A (2021) In Radiography
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Radiographers' engagement in research is important for the development of evidence-based practice in radiography; however, radiographers' interest in research has rarely been reported. This study sought to ascertain radiographers' opinions about radiography research and investigate their involvement in research activities in four Nordic countries.

METHODS: This study was conducted in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. A study-specific questionnaire was developed in English and adapted to each language of the study sample, and the content and face validity of the adaptations were evaluated. An online tool was used to collect the study data. The questionnaire link was distributed in September 2019 to radiographers... (More)

INTRODUCTION: Radiographers' engagement in research is important for the development of evidence-based practice in radiography; however, radiographers' interest in research has rarely been reported. This study sought to ascertain radiographers' opinions about radiography research and investigate their involvement in research activities in four Nordic countries.

METHODS: This study was conducted in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. A study-specific questionnaire was developed in English and adapted to each language of the study sample, and the content and face validity of the adaptations were evaluated. An online tool was used to collect the study data. The questionnaire link was distributed in September 2019 to radiographers working in clinical settings in four Nordic countries (n = 4572).

RESULTS: The overall response rate was 14% (n = 662/4572). Research involvement was reported by 33% of the respondents; data collection was the main type of contribution. Radiographers who contributed to research were more likely to be male, have longer work experience, hold a master's or doctoral degree, work as managers and be employed in university hospitals. Nearly all agreed that radiography research is needed to promote the radiography profession and provide the evidence base for radiographic practice. However, only 14% were aware of the current research evidence regarding their professional field of specialisation, and 19% indicated that they developed current practices based on research evidence.

CONCLUSION: The findings indicate that, although radiographers had positive attitudes towards radiography research, their involvement in research and utilisation of research evidence in practice is low.

IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Strategies should be developed to improve knowledge and skills related to evidence-based practice and stimulate radiographers' engagement in research.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Radiography
publisher
W.B. Saunders
external identifiers
  • scopus:85101572995
  • pmid:33640279
ISSN
1078-8174
DOI
10.1016/j.radi.2021.02.002
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7f89ae9a-a754-4724-9677-a2b7ac8b6606
date added to LUP
2021-03-25 14:30:29
date last changed
2024-04-18 04:23:55
@article{7f89ae9a-a754-4724-9677-a2b7ac8b6606,
  abstract     = {{<p>INTRODUCTION: Radiographers' engagement in research is important for the development of evidence-based practice in radiography; however, radiographers' interest in research has rarely been reported. This study sought to ascertain radiographers' opinions about radiography research and investigate their involvement in research activities in four Nordic countries.</p><p>METHODS: This study was conducted in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. A study-specific questionnaire was developed in English and adapted to each language of the study sample, and the content and face validity of the adaptations were evaluated. An online tool was used to collect the study data. The questionnaire link was distributed in September 2019 to radiographers working in clinical settings in four Nordic countries (n = 4572).</p><p>RESULTS: The overall response rate was 14% (n = 662/4572). Research involvement was reported by 33% of the respondents; data collection was the main type of contribution. Radiographers who contributed to research were more likely to be male, have longer work experience, hold a master's or doctoral degree, work as managers and be employed in university hospitals. Nearly all agreed that radiography research is needed to promote the radiography profession and provide the evidence base for radiographic practice. However, only 14% were aware of the current research evidence regarding their professional field of specialisation, and 19% indicated that they developed current practices based on research evidence.</p><p>CONCLUSION: The findings indicate that, although radiographers had positive attitudes towards radiography research, their involvement in research and utilisation of research evidence in practice is low.</p><p>IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Strategies should be developed to improve knowledge and skills related to evidence-based practice and stimulate radiographers' engagement in research.</p>}},
  author       = {{Saukko, E and Andersson, B T and Bolejko, A and Debess, J and Fridell, K and Henner, A and Mussmann, B R and Sanderud, A}},
  issn         = {{1078-8174}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{02}},
  publisher    = {{W.B. Saunders}},
  series       = {{Radiography}},
  title        = {{Radiographers' involvement in research activities and opinions on radiography research : A Nordic survey}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.radi.2021.02.002}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.radi.2021.02.002}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}