Skip to main content

University of Salford home

Centre for Applied Health Research

  • Home
    • Digital Health and Medical Imaging
    • Equity, Inequalities, and Inclusivity
    • Care Across the Lifecourse
    • Long Term Conditions
    • Mental Health and Neurodiversity
  • News
  • Collaborators and Partnerships
  • Our Facilities
  • Our Staff
  1. Home
  2. Care Across the Lifecourse
  3. Barriers to Research Progress for Perioperative Care Practitioners Working in Cardiothoracic Surgery

Barriers to Research Progress for Perioperative Care Practitioners Working in Cardiothoracic Surgery

Policy and research literature worldwide support the need to build research capacity and capability among non-medical practitioners within healthcare systems. However, there exists a paucity of evidence on whether practitioners in cardiothoracic surgery are attuned to this and on what barriers or enablers exist.

A survey was carried out with non-medical practitioners working in cardiothoracic surgery in the United Kingdom to explore attitudes towards health research and audit, and to identify current challenges and barriers to surgical research and audit as perceived by cardiothoracic nurses and allied health professionals.

A total of 160 completed questionnaires were returned. 99% of respondents supported the need for research and believed that evidence-based surgical care improves outcomes for patients. 72% reported that their employer motivates them to take part in national research or audit but only 22% were allocated time to do so within their role; 96% reported their interest in being involved in research and audit, yet only 30% believed they had the skills to undertake research. 96% reported needing additional training.

More work is needed to increase awareness, capacity and capability among cardiothoracic surgery care practitioners, and indeed other specialities to achieve research progress.

Study start date: January 2022.

Study end date: January 2023, study completed and published.

Funders

Society of Cardiothoracic Surgery

NIHR Surgical Incubator

Team

Prof. Bhuvaneswari Krishnamoorthy (Bibleraaj)

Prof. Heather Iles-Smith

Mr. Sridhar Rathinam

Mr. Martin Birchall

© 2025 University of Salford