Research on Social Work Practice

 

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This version was published on July 1, 2008
Research on Social Work Practice, Vol. 18, No. 4, 285-291 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1049731507302263

From Knowledge Production to Implementation: Research Challenges and Imperatives

Enola K. Proctor

Washington University in St. Louis, ekp{at}wustl.edu

Aaron Rosen

Washington University in St. Louis

As evidence-based practice is increasingly accepted in social work, the challenges associated with its actual implementation become more apparent and pressing. This article identifies implementation as a critical issue for research; implementation itself must be better understood if evidence-based practices are to be used and resultant improvements to practice are to be realized. Social work needs to engage more fully in (a) service system research and (b) implementation research, each of which complements and has potential to extend the benefits of efficacy and effectiveness research. Service system research can enhance the fit of empirically supported treatments to the needs of real-world practice and thus facilitate their implementation. Implementation studies examine the acceptability of evidence-based interventions, the feasibility and likelihood of their sustained use, and the decision-support procedures that can help practitioners apply probabilistically based, empirically supported treatments to the individual case in real-world practice.

Key Words: evidence-based practice • implementation research • service systems research • social work research


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