Nursing Research Exam 1

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boolean operators

AND, OR (grouping tg of like terms within returned results), and NOT used in search strings to refine the scope of the search define the relationships between words or groups of words in a literature search

systematic review and meta-analysis

Collects all previous studies on the topic and statistically combines their results combining results from multiple studies

levels of evidence: Quantitative

I: systematic review/meta-analysis of RCTs II: RCT III: quasi-experimental studies IV: nonexperimental studies

levels of evidence

I: systematic review/meta-analysis of RCTs II: RCT III: Quasi-experimental studies IV: nonexperimental studies V: meta-synthesis VI: qualitative VII: expert opinion, committee reports

Levels of evidence: Reviews

Level I: systematic review/meta-analysis of RCTs Level V: meta-synthesis

level I: systematic review/meta-analysis of RCTs

MOST rigorous, systematic data that can be generated - combining results from multiple studies

concept

an image or symbolic representation of an abstract idea can be CONCRETE (BP, weight) or ABSTRACT (hope/spirituality)

consumer's goal of the literature review

answer a clinical question or solve a problem to improve patient outcomes evaluate for credible findings

PICO template for etiology

are ___(p) who have ________(I) at _______ (inc/dec) risk for/of _______(O) compared with _________(P) with/without. ________(C)?

PICO template for diagnosis or diagnostic test

are ____ (I) more accurate in diagnosing _________(P) compared with ________(C) for _________(O)?

pico (i)

area of healthcare that is of interest (e.g. nursing intervention, treatment, diagnostic study)

secondary useful source

article that contains results but is NOT the original study! publications written by person(s) other than the person who conducted the study or developed the conceptual model NOT considered empirical research

EBP goal

assess and use NEW knowledge

critical reading identifies...

assumptions - key concepts and methods - if conclusions match the findings

hypothesis theory base

consistent with existing theory and research findings

conceptual definition

conveys general meaning that defines or explains the concept as it is rooted in theoretical literature

researcher's goal of the literature review

develop the K foundation necessary to design a sound study generate research questions and hypotheses determine all that is known on a research topic

is there an independent variable with a qualitative study?

NO!!

does QI require new knowledge

NO!!! it's refining a process!!! refine, test, and reevaluate!!!

statistical hypothesis

NULL hypothesis NO relationship bn IV and DV null is rejected with statistically significant findings

PICO question

Population Intervention Comparison Outcome

nondirectional hypothesis

Predicts the existence of a relationship, not its direction ex: There is a relationship between baccalaureate nursing students' intramuscular injection competency and simulation training.​

Q v Q: objectivity

Quant: OBjective (hard fact- ex: # ppl with a condition, test result) Qual: SUBjective (opinionated- ex: practice environment description)

Q v Q: data type

Quant: numeric Qual: words

Q v Q: study questions

Quant: tests relationships, differences, cause-and-effect, intervention effectiveness Qual: looks for meaning

research hypothesis

SCIENTIFIC hypothesis an EXPECTED relationship of variables

results

WHAT the outcomes were

discussion

WHY the study mattered (significance) HOW the study compares with similar ones WHAT the study adds to existing literature - limitations - conclusions

introduction/background

WHY the study was conducted - study purpose (usually at end of intro) - lit review - theoretical framework

model

a graphic or symbolic representation of a phenomenon

T or F: the lit review mainly should use primary sources; that is, research articles and books by the original author

True

quasi-experimental studies

studies of cause and effect similar to experimental design but using convenience samples or existing groups to test interventions something in the environment we are manipulating, something we change to cause an outcome

critical appraisal- quality

study's design, implementation and analysis

literature review

summary of current empirical and theoretical knowledge about a particular practice problem that provides a bases for the study conducted - a summary or synthesis of what we know (existing K)

research perspective of a lit review

systematic and critical appraisal provides the development and foundation of a research study provides the development and foundation of the theoretical framework ESSENTIAL to all quantitative and qualitative research studies

what is nursing research?

systematic, rigorous, critical investigation that aims to answer questions about nursing phenomena

literature review of a QUANTITATIVE study

theoretical or conceptual framework primary and secondary sources research Q and hypothesis data analysis, discussion, conclusions, implications, recommendations

research evidence

what is behind the WHY of what we are doing for our patients

study purpose, aims, and objectives

what the researcher hopes to achieve terms used interchangeably reflects the research question

variables

what's being studied something that varies (i.e. stress levels, weight) How is X related to Y?

uses of quality improvement

within organizations to improve outcomes to benchmark against other hospitals (e.g. rates of infection, 30-day readmissions) for accredidation

Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT)

experimental method in which participants are randomly assigned to intervention groups and decide if intervention makes a difference compared to a group that didn't receive treatment/therapy/etc.

T or F: commentary in a peer-reviewed journal is considered research

false

you are considering giving a patient an injection for pain, whose report would you feel most comfortable evaluating - the report of a family member or nurse's aide (i.e., _________) or the report by the patient (i.e., ___________)? ​

fam members: secondary source patient: primary source

Lit review from the EBP perspective

focus on critical appraisal of research studies, systematic reviews, clinical practice guidelines, other relevant docs helps det evidence to inform clinical decision making PICO question

PICO template for prevention

for _______(P) does the use of ______(I) reduce the future risk of __________(O)n compared with _________(C)?

PICO template for meaning

how do ______(P) diagnosed with ________(I) perceive. ___________(O) during ____________(T)?

Pico (E)

measure of interest (effect of intervention)

where can you search for evidence?

pre-appraised literature (published review of the literature) primary sources print and electronic index (CINAHL, PubMed) books journal-refereed/peer reviewed search engines

what types of sources should be mainly used in a lit review?

primary

conducting a lit review

process of examining extensive number of research and theoretical sources to generate a picture of what's known, not known, and has inconsistently found about a clinical problem

pico (p)

pt or group of patients that are the focus of the question

secondary source for lit review

published articles or books written by persons OTHER than the individ who conducted the study or developed the theory. NOT considered empirical research

names of systematic reviews (quant vs qual)

quant: meta-analyses qual: meta-syntheses

hierarchy of levels of evidence

quantitative OVER qualitative!

what type of resource is the BEST choice?

referred or peer-reviewed journal articles (contain the latest info)

4 types of hypotheses

research statistical directional nondirectional

primary source for lit review

research articles and books by the ORIGINAL author

testability

research questions must be testable (measurable) by quantitative or qualitative methods propose a relationship between IV and DV in a way that the relationship can be measured

critical appraisal

research role of BSN- prepared nurses to implement evidence-based practices objectively and critically evaluate a research article's content for scientific merit and application to practice consider the study's strengths, weaknesses, and nature of evidence

what does clinical inquiry lead to?

research, evidence-based practice, or quality improvement

Purpose: research vs EBP vs QI

research: creates new K EBP: application of new K QI: test an existing process

Process: research vs EBP vs QI

research: generalizable or transferrable EBP: problem solving approach, INVOLVES clinicians, patients, and families QI: rapid cycle (Plan, Do, Study, Act)

goals: research vs EBP vs QI

research: generate NEW K EBP: access and USE NEW K QI: improve a process within a clinical system using EXISTING K

a nurse researcher find four useful resources. What is an appropriate next action?

review the resources in the articles

theory

set of interrelated concepts that provides a systematic view of a phenomenon allows relationships to be proposed and predictions to be made HOW VARIABLES RELATE TO ONE ANOTHER

operational definition

specifies how the concept will be measured defines what instruments will be used to assess presence of the concept and the amount or degree to which the concept exists

pico (C)

standard care to compare to intervention

construct

complex concept; comprised of more than one concept- designed to fit a purpose (e.g) maternal-infant bonding, health-related QOL

what is the first thing a nurse researcher would do after a research problem or idea has been identified?

conduct a literature review

critical investigation

"skeptic" lens - asking a lot of follow-up questions to dig deeper

appraising research questions for their significance

"so what?" - what is the potential contribution/benefit of answering this research question? - research questions should have the potential to extend scientific nursing knowledge

critical appraisal- quantity

# of studies, participants

influence for research questions

- clinical experience - identifying gaps in literature - question's potential significance - can the research be done?

critiques of each reviewed study should include...

- strengths - weaknesses - limitations of the design - conflicts - gaps in info

refereed or peer-reviewed journal

-A panel of scholars who are experts review submitted manuscripts. -Usually the reviews are "blind" to promote objectivity; that is, the manuscript to be reviewed does not include the name of the authors. -The reviewers use a set of scholarly criteria to judge whether a manuscript meets the publication standards of the journal.

5 steps of EBP practice

1. ask a question 2. find best evidence (start with a literature review to find types of articles we want (RESEARCH STUDIES)) 3. evaluate evidence (in terms of quantitative and qualitative) 4. apply information 5. evaluate outcomes

first 3 steps of the EBP process

1. ask clinical questions 2. identify and gather evidence 3. critically appraise and synthesize the evidence or literature

3 pieces of evidence based practice

1. research evidence 2. clinical practice 3. patient family values and preferences

in each article that you review, you should determine the...

1. research question and hypothesis 2. design and method 3. outcome of the analysis 4. CRITIQUE it! what's the level of evidence? how good was the article? --> EVERY study has limitations!

how far back can you go?

3, max 5 yrs landmark studies may be included in absolutely essential to background of the problem

what is the ideal time frame for a literature search?

5 years

V: meta-synthesis

A synthesis of a number of qualitative articles on a focused topic using specific qualitative methodology.

when is the research hypotheses developed

BEFORE the study is conducted

which source provides the most information on nursing evidence-based practice?

CINAHL

methods

HOW the study was conducted

PICO template for prognosis/predictions

In ________ (P) how does ________(I) compared to ________(C) influence _______(O) over ________(T)?

associative relationship (hypothesis)

X and Y are systematically related--> variable change in relation to each other

causal relationship (hypothesis)

X causes a change in Y --> cause and effect

directional hypothesis

a hypothesis that makes a specific prediction about the direction of the relationship between two variables ex: Baccalaureate nursing students who receive simulation training will be more competent in intramuscular injection in an actual patient care setting than students who do not receive simulation training.​

what does clinical inquiry begin with?

a question or curiousity

theoretical framework

a set of interrelated principles designed to explain a particular phenomenon and to provide a point of view; a map for understanding relationships bn or among vars in a quant study the basis for the development of research questions or hypotheses

components of a research article

abstract introduction/background methods results discussion

primary Essential source

actual original study and the results that come from it publications written by the persons who conducted the study or developed the conceptual model

empirical research

based on observed and measured phenomena and derives K from actual experience rather than theory or belief

identifying significance

benefit (who?) applicability (to practice setting) untested theoretical concepts existing knowledge (does it extend or challenge current K) nursing practices/practices (why does it matter? what are the implications for nurses?)

how is nursing research rigorous?

best practices for undergoing research

abstract

clear overview of purpose, methods, results, conclusions

critical appraisal- consistency

do the studies have similar or different conclusions?

main question of critical appraisal

does the study and its conclusions make sense?

independent variable

effects dependent variable may be manipulated in experimental studies

outcome of the analysis diagram!

everything stems from what already have and know!

research hypotheses

formal statements of expected relationships among 2 or more variables predicts the expected outcome of a study (researcher attempts to answer the Q) provides direction for collection, analysis, and interpretation of data

purpose of clinical questions

guide EBP form the basis for searching the literature to identify relevant research evidence

clinical practice

how we should implement the practice changes that we make

how to write a research question

idea brainstorming lit review identifying variables formulate research question

PICO template for intervention/therapy

in _________(p), what is the effect of ______(I) on __________(O) compared with ________(C) within ________ (T)?

population

large collection of individuals (or objects) that is the focus of a research study

cochrane library

leading resource for systematic reviews in health care

literature review of a QUALITATIVE study

little is known about topic slightly more abbreviated than quant but same steps

aim of qualitative research

looks for meaning of a lived experience; researchers seek to understand a human experience within a defined context

scientific method sequence

observation --> question --> research--> hypothesis--> experiment--> data --> conclusion

nursing phenomena

things perceived by our senses with a nursing focus ex: how their relationships with others are ex: confidence in self bc pt will be successful in regiment

does the summary of each reviewed study reflect the essential components of the study design?

type and size of sample reliability and validity of instruments consistency of data collection procedures consistency of data collection procedures appropriate data analysis identification of limitations

how is nursing research systematic?

use of a scientific method (certain way of doing something)

quality improvement (QI)

uses available knowledge using data to monitor outcomes of care design and test changes in practice (improve quality and safety of care delivery)

how are theoretical or conceptual frameworks usually illustrated?

using a diagram

levels of evidence: Qualitative

v: meta-synthesis VI: qualitative

dependent variable

variable of interest NOT manipulated changes with independent variable

what components does the hypothesis include

variables population predicted outcome

testable hypothesis

variables can be observed, measured, analyzed


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