Research User Group newsletter 2019 RUG newsletter FINAL version 30.10.19 | Page 6

6 RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS POSTGRADUATE SYMPOSIUM The Keele Postgraduate Research Symposium is an annual event whereby each post-grad student has the opportunity to share the area of work that they are researching. For Laura Swaithes, who is currently part of the Impact Accelerator Unit team looking at implementation, this was an opportunity to showcase her work in the field of knowledge mobilisation. Laura explained: "The title of my presentation was ‘From research to primary care: a knowledge mobilisation study in osteoarthritis’ which basically means ‘ how do we get research about joint pain into general practice care’? I provided an overview of my thesis and the key findings, which have been developed into a toolkit (summarised below). A main focus of my presentation was the role that patients and the public played. Winning an award that was voted by our PPIE representatives was great and reinforced that the way in which I conducted and presented my work is understandable and relevant. Overall, it was a great event for sharing and learning and I received lots of positive comments about my work." RUG member Katie Tempest and LINK member Patricia Callaghan volunteered to be judges. Katie commented: "It was my privilege to be asked to attend the symposium. We judged 10 minute presentations made by student members as well as Laura Swaithes posters that were on display on many and varied topics.  The overall quality of the presentations made our job very difficult. This symposium is held every year and I hope that other RUG colleagues can attend next year. The posters showed an incredible depth of knowledge on a variety of topics pertinent to research. Fortunately Patricia and I were on the same page and incredibly we came to the same results with no conferring." KNOWLEDGE MOBILISATION Impact Accelerator Unit Knowledge Mobilisation is an active process that can transform health care through the movement of knowledge across and between professional, clinical and public boundaries. It’s about making research evidence accessible, understandable and useful beyond academia. The aim of knowledge mobilisation is to enable stakeholders to work together to increase research-informed healthcare and health care- informed research, thereby improving patient care.