Learning from one another: enriching interactive knowledge-sharing mechanisms to support knowledge brokering in European health systems
Publication year: 2013
Policy-makers, stakeholders and knowledge brokers (including researchers) all
have a great deal they can learn from one another. Policy-makers need access
to good-quality health systems information that they can apply to a local issue.
Stakeholders may seek to influence health policy as well as make decisions in
their own spheres of responsibilities. Knowledge brokers need information about
policy priorities and the policy context in order to produce, package and share
health systems information that will be genuinely useful to decision-makers.
The purpose of this BRIDGE summary is to encourage debate and innovation
about the ways in which policy-makers, stakeholders and knowledge brokers
can, by working together, engage with health systems information so as to
increase the likelihood that it will be understood and used. Current thinking
about knowledge brokering is largely driven by anecdotal information; this
document presents real-world insights from research on knowledge brokering,
primarily from Europe but drawing on global experience as well.