Top 10 priorities for occupational therapy research in the UK
Setting the research agenda for occupational therapy and addressing the unanswered questions that matter most to people accessing and delivering occupational therapy services.
The top 10 priorities for occupational therapy research in the UK have now been identified. Read the full report here
The top 10
- How does occupational therapy make a difference and have impact on everyday lives?
- How can occupational therapists ensure that person-centred practice is central to how they work?
- How can occupational therapists work more effectively with the family and carers of people who access services?
- What are the long-term benefits of occupational therapy intervention?
- What are the benefits or impact of occupational therapy in primary care settings? (e.g. services delivered by your local general practice surgery, community pharmacy, dental and optometry (eye health) services)
- How can occupational therapy services be more inclusive of both mental and physical health?
- What is the role of occupational therapy in supporting self-management? (e.g. helping people with illness to manage their health on a day-to-day basis)
- What is the role or impact of occupational therapy in reducing hospital admissions?
- How can occupational therapists work most effectively with other professionals to improve outcomes for people who access services? (e.g. multi-disciplinary teams, commissioners, community agencies)
- What is the cost-effectiveness of occupational therapy services?
Download the top 10 and more information about the research priorities.
Watch Dr Jo Watson, RCOT Assistant Director – Education and Research, talk about why these priorities are so important for setting the future direction of research for occupational therapy in the UK.
Making a difference
These priorities will set the research agenda for occupational therapy in the future and help us focus on addressing the unanswered questions that matter the most to people who access and deliver occupational therapy services.
Our focus now is to encourage and support members to undertake and contribute to research that helps to answer the questions set out in the priorities. Funding available through the RCOT Research Foundation will be focused on supporting research that addresses the top 10. We will also be working to influence the opening up of external research funding opportunities.
Having this clear agenda for research takes RCOT a step closer to achieving its vision for research which is to have, within the next decade, a UK-wide culture that embraces engaging in and with research as every occupational therapist’s business embedded within the profession.
Research builds the evidence base underpinning occupational therapy and improves the experiences and outcomes for people accessing our services.
The Priority Setting Partnership
Throughout the project, RCOT’s focus has been to ensure that people who access occupational therapy, their carers, occupational therapists and other health and care professionals have been involved in every step. We were able to achieve this by partnering with the James Lind Alliance (JLA) in a Priority Setting Partnership (PSP) to follow the JLA’s well-respected and inclusive process.
The first stage of the process was to find out what unanswered questions people had about occupational therapy that research could answer. After checking that they truly were unanswered questions, people were then asked to prioritise these questions, first through shortlisting in a nationwide survey and finally through reaching agreement in a final prioritisation workshop.
Each priority is an overarching summary question within which there may be several questions to be answered by research. You can download the raw data behind each priority below and from the JLA website.
Key documents
These key documents provide background information underpinning the top 10, including the questions that were submitted in the first survey and used to create the 66 summary questions in the second survey.
Thank you
Thank you to everyone who has helped us to identify the UK’s top 10 occupational therapy research priorities. Our particular thanks go to people who access occupational therapy services and their carers, as well as all our members and other health and care professionals who took part in our surveys and workshop.
Our PSP was overseen by a Steering Group and we would like to thank the group members and Katherine Cowan, Senior JLA Adviser, who chaired the Steering Group, for all their hard work and support throughout the project. We are very grateful to the James Lind Alliance (JLA) for partnering with us on this important work.
Thank you also to all our project partners and supporters who promoted our PSP to their networks and helped us hear from a broad range of people who access occupational therapy services.
You can find out more about our Steering Group and project partners and supporters below.
The process
Below is a brief overview of the process we undertook in identifying the top 10 research priorities for occupational therapy in the UK. You can find out more about the process on the JLA website.
1. We've created a steering group.
2. We ran a survey.
3. We summarised the responses.
4. We checked the evidence.
5. We ran a second survey.
6. We ran a workshop.
7. We published and are now promoting the top 10 research priorities.
Next steps for the Top10 research priorities
Identification of the Top 10 research priorities for occupational therapy in the UK is just the start of ongoing work.
Getting involved in addressing the Top 10 research priorities.
FAQs
What is the James Lind Alliance and why has RCOT partnered with them on this project?
How were the members of the Steering Group selected?
What efforts were made to hear from a diverse range of people, including those from BAME backgrounds and other minority or marginalised groups, people with learning difficulties and older people?
What did RCOT learn from the experience of engaging with this wider audience, which included people with experience of accessing occupational therapy services and their carers/families?
How were the participants in the final prioritisation workshop selected?
How did COVID-19 affect the project?
Is the top 10 still relevant in the context of COVID-19?
What happens to the questions that are not included in the top 10?
What happens next to the research priorities?
Will there be any publications where I can read more on the project?
Why do the research priorities apply to the UK and not internationally?
Video, podcast and articles
Watch our PSP video
Listen to our research priorities podcast
Read blogs and articles about the research priorities
Our project partners and supporters
Steering Group members
Anne Addison
Dr Maria Avantaggiato-Quinn
Dr Mary Birken
Dr Michael Clark
Katherine Cowan
Dr Edward Duncan
Clenton Farquharson
Dr Naomi Gallant
Amy Mary Rose Herring
Dr Jane Horne
Dr Anne Johnson
Jenny Mac Donnell
Dr Sarah Markham
Vonnie McWilliams
Dr Sally Payne
Stephanie Platt
Dr Jenny Preston
Isaac Samuels
Alexander Smith
Michael Turner
Ruth Unstead-Joss
Dr Gill Ward
Dr Jo Watson
Dr Phillip Whitehead
Contact
Dr Gillian Ward | Research and Development Manager | Gillian.Ward@rcot.co.uk | 020 3141 4635 |