“…In a recent edition of this journal (EPP), Heyeres, Tsey, Yang, Yan, and Jiang, (2018) examined the types of impact and the factors that enable effective translation of research findings into impact. The 24 included studies reported a wide range of impacts including the economic value of research (Alene & Coulibaly, 2009;Walker, Ryan, & Kelley, 2010;Wooding, Hanney, Buxton, & Grant, 2005), measurable improvements in health (Johnston, Rootenberg, Katrak, Smith, & Elkins, 2006), changes in clinical or professional practice (Bodeau-Livinec, Simon, Montagnier-Petrissans, Joel, & Fery-Lemonnier, 2006;Caddell, Hatchette, & McGrath, 2010;Donovan, Butler, Butt, Jones, & Hanney, 2014;Greenhalgh & Fahy, 2015;Jones, 2015;Kelly, Kent, McMahon, Taylor, & Traynor, 2016;Milat et al, 2013;Orians, Abed, Drew, Rose, Cohen and Phelps, 2009;Raftery, Hanney, Green, & Buxton, 2009), improved quality of care (Caddell, Hatchette & McGrath, 2010;Wooding et al, 2005), organisational awareness raising (Milat et al, 2013), and improved knowledge and understanding of health issues (Home, 2008 andKothari, Peter, Donskov, &Luciani, 2017). Six studies reported making an impact on guidelines or institutional policies (Greenhalgh & Fahy, 2015;Home, 2008;Jarman & Bryan, 2015;Jones, 2015;Kelly et al 2016;Wooding et al, 2005), while one reported on educational curriculum changes (Orians et al, 2009).…”