Researchers have always recognised the importance of disseminating the findings of
their work, however, recently the need to proactively plan and drive the impact of
those findings on the wider society has become a necessity. Firstly, this is because
funders require evidence of return from investment and secondly and crucially because
national research assessments are becoming powerful determinants of future funding.
In research studies associated with nursing, impact needs to be demonstrated by showing
the effect on a range of stakeholders including service users, patients, carers, the
nursing workforce and commissioners. Engaging these groups is a well-known challenge
influenced by lack of access to academic journals, lack of time to read long complex
research papers and lack of opportunities to interact directly with the researchers.
This needs to be addressed urgently to enable nursing research to increase the impact
that it has on health delivery and the work of clinical practitioners. Social media
is potentially a novel way of enabling research teams to both communicate about research
as studies progress and to disseminate findings and research funders are increasingly
using it to publicise information about research programmes and studies they fund.
A search of the healthcare literature reveals that advice and guidance on the use
of social media for research studies is not well understood or exploited by the research
community. This paper, therefore, explores how using social networking platforms,
notably Twitter™ offers potential new ways for communicating research findings, accessing
diverse and traditionally hard-to-reach audiences, knowledge exchange at an exponential
rate, and enabling new means of capturing and demonstrating research impact. The paper
discusses approaches to initiate the setup of social networking platforms in research
projects and considers the practical challenges of using Twitter™ in nursing and healthcare
research. The discussion is illuminated with examples from our current research. In
summary, we suggest that the use of social media micro-blogging platforms is a contemporary,
fast, easy and cost effective way to augment existing ways of disseminating research
which helps drive impact.