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Abstract

Background: Patient stories are real-life experiences told from a patient’s or their family’s perspective. In the past, patient stories have served many purposes in healthcare, such as spreading knowledge, educating providers, or conveying the patient experience. Patient stories are increasingly used as a knowledge translation (KT) strategy to improve the uptake of evidence-based interventions (EBIs) into clinical healthcare practices by embodying the patient experience. However, little is known about the use of patient stories to support the sustainability of EBIs in healthcare practices. There is a need to understand how patient stories can be used for the long-term use and benefit of EBIs in practice. Objective: Our research explored how patient stories facilitate the sustainability of EBIs in healthcare. Methods: We conducted a secondary thematic analysis of 20 qualitative interviews from a realist evaluation previously published by Flynn et al. Results: We found that the use of patient stories as a KT strategy for the sustainability of two EBIs created buy-in towards new research, motivated and encouraged staff to continue to engage with the intervention long-term and facilitated the spread of the EBI. Our findings demonstrate how sharing patient stories digitally or through learning collaboratives and online toolkits, can facilitate sustainability by enabling patient stories to be saved and distributed to a wide audience at any time. Despite the potential use of patient stories to support long-term research use, more research is needed to understand how effective patient stories are at supporting the long-term use of research evidence aimed to improve healthcare practice.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.

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