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The challenges of being evidence-informed in out-of-home care policy and practice: exploring the potential of systematic maps. Belinda Mayfield, BSW, PhD. Background/Contextual factors. AASW code of ethics – to maintain and expand levels of current knowledge, theory and skill
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The challenges of being evidence-informed in out-of-home care policy and practice: exploring the potential of systematic maps Belinda Mayfield, BSW, PhD
Background/Contextual factors • AASW code of ethics – to maintain and expand levels of current knowledge, theory and skill • Barriers to accessibility of knowledge sources from the professional literature; time, oral culture, short timeframes for decisions, skill in searching, cost, gaps in research, debates about ‘evidence’ • Audit of Australian out of home care research (Cashmore & Ainsworth, 2004) 1995-2004 • Crime Misconduct Commission Inquiry (2005) • Out-of-home care: Messages from research(Bromfield,Higgins,Osborn,Panozzo & Richardson, 2005) • Emergence of systematic mapping to systematically and transparently describe the extent of research in a field, to identify gaps and to provide direct links to the evidence (Clapton et al., 2009)
Research aims Overall To investigate the issues of the accessibility of the out-of-home care literature as a source of knowledge to professionals in roles which influence policy and practice. Specifically, the aims were to: • Develop a systematic map of the out-of-home care literature • Provide a descriptive analysis of the composition of the available literature to identify gaps and areas of substantial knowledge • Gain insight about how different user roles view their knowledge needs and the barriers to accessibility • Gather feedback about the utility and limitations of the map
Why a map and not a systematic review • In social sciences interest in not only what works but for whom, in what circumstances, why and for what outcomes • Practitioners perspective – case management includes key decisions about removal, assessment of protective and care needs, placement matching, interventions etc. – broader scope than a review • Policy makers – often short timeframes eg post inquiry 12 weeks to prepare the Blueprint for reform; systematic reviews narrowly focused and 6 months + to undertake • Program development and management require different types of information, re cost effectiveness, feasibility, service and system level outcomes; new initiatives not yet evaluated • How theory, policy and practice literature may also inform….rather than directing what we do - to query/challenge current jurisdiction specific approaches; have we got it right or are there other ways eg permanency
Overview of study with 2 key phases: • A systematic map of out-of-home care literature 1995-2008 • Interviews with “users” to examine the utility of the map. User perspectives include: • Researchers & knowledge ‘translators’ • Policy makers, program managers & practitioners
Conceptual framework • Ecosystemic view of out-of-home care – built on Australian audit • Case management framework • Different types of knowledge, their interrelationships ( complementarities, inconsistencies and gaps), multiple uses • Models of knowledge utilisation
Model of Professional Knowledge (Drury-Hudson, 1997) Theoretical Knowledge Empirical Knowledge Procedural Knowledge Personal Knowledge Professional Knowledge Practice Knowledge
Initial planning, topic setting and preliminary work Establish inclusion/exclusion criteria Searching Screening and coding Analysis and development of map report Finalisation of the systematic map Dissemination Methodology of systematic mapping
Methodology • Preliminary handsearch of a key UK journal and USA journal • Electronic searches to test individual search terms, prior to a ‘rolled up’ search • 1995-2008 ( built on timeframes for Australian audit) • Searches in PsycInfo, ERIC, Social Services Abstracts,Medline,Family and Society Plus.
Findings • Content findings • Methodological findings • Knowledge needs of different users • Barriers and enablers to accessibility of the out-of-home care literature
Total reports identified n=12,939 (3,229 duplicates) Research studies n=2,616 Conceptual or theoretical n=981 Total abstracts screened n=9,710 Literature reviews n=207 Program description n=387 Screened In N=4,425 Screened out n=5,285 Book reviews n=234 Insufficient data to screen n = 945 Not child protection population n=694 Not specific to out-of-home care n=2,986 Not on topic n=660 Risk assessment n=146 Family preservation n=110 Prevention and early intervention n=137 Overall screening results
Analysis of composition of content areas • Examined 6 overarching content areas: • Families of children in care • Children and young people in care • Foster families • Kinship care • Residential care • Quality of care
Analysis • Composition of the literature • Gaps and areas for further investigation: • Research gaps • Literature reviews
Methological findings • Volume and complexity in locating relevant references (over 9,500 references= over 4,000 relevant publications and 2,615 research literature • Time consuming task – approx 50 hours to search; screening and coding (approx. 1 hour to screen 20 abstracts) Total approx. 500 hrs • 62% of research found in PsychInfo • 38% of research across other 4; 5% unique to Medline • Approx double number of Aust. studies identified by audit • Analysis phase 8-12 weeks
Informants views • Knowledge needs: • Research • Theory • Practice • Strategies: • Active • Passive • Interactive • Barriers: Time, volume, access, readability, relevance, motivation and org culture • A sense of being overwhelmed
Utility of the map • Overview of body of literature • Responsive to different knowledge needs • Concise; a starting point • Easy to update and expand • New insights into the nature of the gaps eg policy debates that highlight need for research; emerging practice that requires evaluations
Conclusions • Time intensive processes not feasible • Importance of secondary analysis to support accessibility • Mapping offers potential to make explicit strengths and limitations of the knowledge bases; an accountable way to manage the uncertainty • Potential of maps to highlight gaps in primary research and areas of substantial knowledge for in-depth reviews.
Implications • Policy and practice: • Need to go beyond established knowledge; • Basis for reasonable hypotheses • Further research – primary and secondary analysis • Systematic mapping methodology: • Boundaries of maps – content and types of knowledge • User involvement
Overall conclusions • To move beyond the rhetoric of being evidence- informed need to address gaps in both primary and secondary research • The need to engage users to identify questions and priorities