Table 1.
Type of research | Practical requirements | General aim | Team members |
---|---|---|---|
Audit | Ongoing or fixed‐period data collection about an aspect of routine clinical practice | To assess whether current clinical practice is meeting a predetermined standard | C, M, T, J, A |
Service evaluation/improvement | Fixed‐period data collection about an aspect of current clinical practice | To evaluate current clinical practice with a view to making improvements | C, M, T, J, A |
Literature reviews | Searching, reading, and synthesizing existing data on a given topic | To summarize current literature and consider directions for further research | C, T, J |
Meta‐analysis/synthesis | Combining and analysing data from multiple existing studies | To examine common research questions by pooling data from multiple sources | C, E, S |
Case studies/seriesa | Conducting and describing a piece of clinical work with a person, group, or service, or a series of similar interventions | To describe clinical work that may be of interest to others (e.g., due to client presentation, method used, clinical reflection) and inform future clinical practice | C, T |
Single‐case experimental designsb | Conducting and evaluating a piece of clinical work with a person, group, or service | To compare differences in an outcome before and after an intervention | C, T |
Qualitative designsb | Obtaining and analysing interview, discourse, or written data from participants | To explore participants’ understandings and experiences | C, T, J |
Experimental designsb | Research participants completing a fixed study paradigm | To evaluate the effect of manipulating a variable(s) on a particular outcome | C, T, J |
Survey/questionnaire designsb | Research participants completing questionnaires | To explore the prevalence and range of participants’ responses on a given topic | C, T, J |
Effectiveness studiesb | Delivering and monitoring the effects of an intervention on participants in routine clinical settings | To examine the effectiveness of an intervention when delivered in a routine clinical context | C, M, T, J, A |
RCTsb | Delivering and monitoring the effects of active or control interventions on participants under controlled conditions | To examine the efficacy of an intervention compared to a control group | C, T, J, A, E, S |
C = clinicians; M = managers; T = trainees; J = junior staff (e.g., assistant psychologists, research assistants, other junior staff members); A = administrative staff; E = external collaborators; S = statistical advisors; RCT = randomized controlled trial.
Ethical review may be required.
Ethical review required