“…Regarding this, Dougherty et al (12) identified two major sources of evidence to inform practice (i) internalised evidence; conferences, books, research knowledge and (ii) evidence gathered and used directly for the intervention process; observations, oral reports, and artefacts, with the latter having greater emphasis in practice. Building on this view of 'internal' knowledge as clinical expertise and 'external' knowledge from research, Honore et al (13) found occupational therapists with a clinical practice development role attributed only 7% of total time on development activity related to adding external research knowledge to practice. This highlights that whilst research and practice knowledge are both important (2,14) the use of each may be inequitable in practice.…”