The Journal of continuing education in the health professions
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J Contin Educ Health Prof · Jan 2004
ReviewImplementing clinical guidelines: current evidence and future implications.
One of the most common findings from health services research is a failure to routinely translate research findings into daily practice. Previous systematic reviews of strategies to promote the uptake of research findings suffered from a range of methodologic problems that have been addressed in a more recent systematic review of guideline dissemination and implementation strategies. Changes in practitioner behavior; in the desired direction, were reported in 86% of the comparisons made. ⋯ Overall, there is an imperfect evidence base for decision makers to work from. Many studies had methodologic weaknesses, and reporting of this kind of research is generally poor, making the generalizability of study findings frequently uncertain. A better theoretical underpinning of studies would make this body of research more useful.
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J Contin Educ Health Prof · Jan 2004
ReviewInternet continuing education for health care professionals: an integrative review.
The objective was to review key articles and research studies on practices, preferences, and evaluation of on-line continuing education used by health care professionals. ⋯ Although the Internet is an effective and satisfactory educational format, barriers to use of the Internet for CE still exist. Additional studies are needed to measure the impact of Internet CE on practice performance, reduce barriers to on-line CE, and identify appropriate theoretical frameworks for on-line learning.