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Research for Nurses: Methods and Interpretation Chapter 1 What is research? What is nursing research? What are the goals of Nursing research?
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Research A planned and systematic activity that leads to new knowledge and relationships and/or the discovery of solutions to problems or questions.
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Nursing Research Is research into phenomena that are the primary responsibility of nurses in their professional practice It follows the same rigorous steps as other disciplines It is a systematic investigation of nursing practice, nursing education, & administration of health services
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VARIETIES OF NURSING KNOWLEDGE Research-Based Knowledge Nonresearch-Based Knowledge
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Goals of Nursing Research produce an understanding of human responses to health and illness improve care and promote health acknowledge nursing as a science enhance autonomy over nursing services empower nurses to change practice
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Sources of Nonresearch-Based Nursing Knowledge Tradition Authority Trial and Error Personal Experience Intuition Common Sense Reasoning
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WAYS OF KNOWING IN NURSING AESTHETICS or the art of nursing ETHICS or the moral component of nursing knowledge PERSONAL or the interpersonal interactions and relationships in nursing EMPIRICS or the science of nursing
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Scientific Method Used by quantitative researchers to acquire knowledge Combines the process of logical reasoning with systematic planned investigation, data collection, analysis, and evaluation
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PHILOSOPHY OF NURSING Provides a framework for identifying central concepts Provides assumptions that guide theory development Relates nursing to a world view Shapes how one learns about the world
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STAGES OF A QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH PROJECT Problem Identification Literature Review Selection of a Framework or Theory Formulation of a Research Question or Hypothesis Implementation of Methodology Plan Interpretation of Findings Communication of Results
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RESEARCH DESIGNS Experimental & Quasi-Experimental Survey Qualitative Field Studies New Wave Applied
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PERSPECTIVES IN NURSING SCIENCE Positivist Interpretive Critical
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Positivist Assumptions All behavior is naturally determined Humans are part of the natural world Nature is orderly All objective phenomena are knowable Nothing is self-evident Truth is relative Knowledge comes from experience
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Criticisms of Positivism Value-free research is not possible some aspects of nursing are not scientifically measurable value neutrality is itself a value People perceive reality differently Treat data as isolated parts rather than holistically
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INTERPRETIVE ASSUMPTIONS Humans act and interact on the basis of symbols that have meaning for them a single reality does not exist reality is different for each person and can change with time all values are valid meaning is produced by putting pieces together to make wholes
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Criticisms of Interpretive Perspective subjectivity can not make clear generalizations can not replicate findings emphasis on small samples leads to knowing more and more about less and less
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CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE ASSUMPTIONS Groups with power enhance their position at the expense of less powerful groups scientists have an obligation to work as advocates for positive social change research knowledge empowers citizens to become agents of social transformation
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Criticisms of Critical Perspective May report only findings that are compatible with researchers’ values Unlikely to make an attempt to exclude competing explanations or find support for competing value systems
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Quantitative Research Quantifies observations emphasizes precise measurement, testing of hypotheses based on a sample of observations, and statistical analysis of data describes relationships among variables mathematically treats subject matter like an object
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Qualitative Research Emphasizes verbal descriptions and explanations of human behavior focus on detailed descriptions of life experiences to understand how participants experience and give meaning to their own world
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Qualitative Research Tools for data collection include participant observation, in-depth interviews, or an in-depth analysis of a case Macro level-look at whole institutions Micro level-focus on individual behavior and responses
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Methodological Triangulation application of diverse methods to generate and collect data about a phenomenon Navigational term, refers to use of multiple referents to draw conclusions about what is truth based on assumption that bias would be neutralized when multiple methods, data sources, and investigators are used
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Descriptive Research Concerned with accurate description States “What is” Involves observation of a phenomenon in its natural setting Case study, survey, grounded theory, ethnography, phenomenology
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Explanatory Research Goal is to understand or explain relationships study relationships between characteristics of individuals, groups, situations, or events engage correlational designs ask “Why” questions
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Predictive Research Aims to predict precise relationships between dimensions of a phenomenon or differences between groups Typically involves experimentation with manipulation of some phenomenon to determine its effect on some other phenomenon or aspect of it
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Pure vs Applied PURE Aim is to test existing theories of human behavior Explain observed patterns Document knowledge of the persistence of patterned human behavior APPLIED Aim is to discover knowledge that will bring about specific changes in practice, education, or administration
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