2019
DOI: 10.1186/s13584-018-0273-5
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Mini research projects as a mechanism to improve the quality of dementia care

Abstract: Several models have been proposed to connect academia and practice in order to improve long-term care. In this paper we propose and describe the “Mini-Research Group” as an alternative model of such collaboration. The formation of mini-research groups was the unplanned by-product of a longitudinal action research project headed by the late Prof. Rebecca Bergman, a prominent nursing leader from the Department of Nursing at Tel-Aviv University. It involved a two-stage project aimed at developing, and later imple… Show more

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“…Unlike traditional clinical trials that test interventions under highly controlled conditions, pilot ePCTs test whether dementia care interventions work when they are embedded into everyday healthcare settings under real-world conditions [13]. Pilot ePCTs have tremendous potential to close the science-to-service gap, as described by Golander in the description of mini-research projects as a mechanism to improve the quality of dementia care [14] and by Sternberg and colleagues in their pilot study of home hospice for severe dementia [8].…”
Section: What Is the Nia Impact Collaboratory?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unlike traditional clinical trials that test interventions under highly controlled conditions, pilot ePCTs test whether dementia care interventions work when they are embedded into everyday healthcare settings under real-world conditions [13]. Pilot ePCTs have tremendous potential to close the science-to-service gap, as described by Golander in the description of mini-research projects as a mechanism to improve the quality of dementia care [14] and by Sternberg and colleagues in their pilot study of home hospice for severe dementia [8].…”
Section: What Is the Nia Impact Collaboratory?mentioning
confidence: 99%