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- W4309478834 abstract "We thank Bajpai et al. for their interest in our Policy Forum describing implementation strategies for kidney trials. 1 Reidlinger D.M. Johnson D.W. Craig J.C. et al. Implementation strategies for high impact nephrology trials: the end of the trial is just the beginning. Kidney Int. 2022; 102: 1222-1227 Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (2) Google Scholar Their letter 2 Bajpai D. Willows J.K. Topf J.M. Hiremath S. User-generated social media content in knowledge dissemination. Kidney Int. 2022; 102: 1428-1429 Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (1) Google Scholar suggests our hierarchical framing of social media as a knowledge dissemination strategy for medical research (Figure 3: practical actions to enhance trial implementability) fails to recognize that widespread use of social media has created a rich medium of user-generated content that facilitates bilateral conversations across many platforms. The authors are particularly keen for free open access medical education, a rapidly expanding social media–based medical education platform, to be incorporated into future models of strategic knowledge dissemination. We acknowledge the growing body of literature on social media as an effective avenue for dissemination of health research information, 3 Roland D. Social media, health policy, and knowledge translation. J Am Coll Radiol. 2018; 15: 149-152 Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (20) Google Scholar a topic that was beyond the scope of our article. We also agree the subject deserves more consideration and appreciate Bajpai et al. for raising this important issue, including their elegant graphical representation of user-generated knowledge translation strategies with social media. User-generated social media content in knowledge disseminationKidney InternationalVol. 102Issue 6PreviewThe policy forum on implementation strategies for trials emphasizes the need for knowledge translation strategies.1 The authors describe the roles of medical societies, industry, health regulators, and health research funders, and reference “social media release” as a strategy in Table 2. However, this hierarchical and unidirectional knowledge dissemination paradigm is incomplete in the current era of the widespread use of social media. Free open access medical education is a growing part of trainees’ and mature practitioners' educational diet. Full-Text PDF Implementation strategies for high impact nephrology trials: the end of the trial is just the beginningKidney InternationalVol. 102Issue 6PreviewThere remains wide variation in treatment patterns and outcomes for kidney patients, and nephrology continues to lag behind other medical specialties in the number and quality of randomized controlled trials (RCTs).1 As currently conducted, RCTs require substantial investment in time and resources with enormous effort poured into trial design, funding, partnerships, data acquisition, analysis, and publications. Less attention is paid to activities to maximize practice and policy impact, and evaluation of evidence uptake commonly occurs only through the narrow lens of output metrics in peer-reviewed literature. Full-Text PDF Open Access" @default.
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- W4309478834 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2022.10.002" @default.
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