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Research Introduction Presentation

The document discusses various methods and concepts related to nursing research. It defines nursing research, describes the need for nursing research, and outlines the roles and responsibilities of nurses in the research process.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
17 views38 pages

Research Introduction Presentation

The document discusses various methods and concepts related to nursing research. It defines nursing research, describes the need for nursing research, and outlines the roles and responsibilities of nurses in the research process.

Uploaded by

gemergencycare
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Nursing Research

Dr.Meena Ganapathy
Methods of acquiring knowledge
 Tradition
 Authority
 Borrowing
 Trial & error
 Personal experience
 Role modeling
 Intuition
 Reasoning
Levels of development of
knowledge
 Novice
 Advance beginner
 Competent
 Proficient
 Expert
Reasoning
 Deductive: General to specific
 Eg: All human beings experience loss. All infants are human beings,
hence infants will experience loss if mother is absent.

 Inductive: Specific to general.


 Eg; A head ache is altered level of health that is stressful. It can be
induced that all altered level of health is stressful.
Difference btw inductive &
deductive reasoning
What Is Research?
 To search again
 To examine carefully
 Diligent and systematic inquiry
 Discovery
 Goal is to develop an empirical body of
knowledge for a discipline
What is research?
 Research is systematic inquiry that uses
disciplined methods to answer questions
or solve problems.
 The ultimate goal of research is to
develop, refine, and expand a body of
knowledge.
Definition
 Polit & Hungler (1995) defined nursing research as a “
systematic search for knowledge about issues important
to nursing profession”.
 Polit & Beck (2008) define research as systematic,
enquiry designed to develop trustworthy evidence about
issues of importance to nursing profession.
 “ It is a systematic approach to examining phenomena
important to nursing & nurses”. Lara Talbot (1995)
 “It is a systematic objective process of analyzing
phenomena important to nursing”. Rose Marie
Nieswiadomy(1998).
 Phenomena is a fact that is not fully understood.
Meaning
 It is a scientific process because the results are
verifiable.
 It is an organized investigation of a problem, facts
& relationship.
 It is pursuit of a definite objective with due control
followed by analyses using statistical procedure.
 It is an abstraction (Known, yet not clearly)
 It is one type of problem – solving with more rigor
 It is control and prediction
Problem Solving Method
 There are many problems which needs to be handled for
smooth life.
 Steps in problem solving
 Assessment
 Diagnoses( Problem identification )
 Find out solutions
 Choose the most appropriate solution
 Implementation
 Evaluation
 Re plan
 Nursing Process is a method of problem solving
Difference between research &
Scientific problem solving

 Research  Problem solving


 All elements must be  Clarity & precision are
clearly & precisely important, it is not
described demanded
 Data have to be  Not essential
analyzed with
appropriate statistics
 Control of extraneous  Not mandatory
variables mandatory
Difference between research &
Scientific problem solving
 Primary aim is  Can not generalize
generalization to findings
population
 By replication findings  Can not be verified
can be verified
 There is a moral  No such obligation
obligation to report
the findings in writing
Scientific Research
 It is a systematic, controlled, empirical &
critical investigation of natural phenomena
guided by theory & hypotheses about the
presumed relations among such
phenomena. (Fred N Kerlinger, 1986).
 Empirical means based on experience or
experiment rather than ideas.
Characteristics of scientific
research
 It involves some hypothetical preposition
 A hypothetical preposition is a a tentative
statement about the relationship between
two or more phenomena or variables. (A
hunch).
 It is systematic & controlled.
 It is replicable
 It is empirical- based on objective reality
Main Need for Nursing Research
 It validates nursing as a profession
 It provides scientific basis for nursing
practice
 It demonstrates accountability of the
profession
Other needs for nursing research
 To mould attitudes, intellectual competence &
technical skills
 Fills the gap in knowledge & practice
 Fosters a commitment & accountability to
consumer
 Identifies the role of nurse in changing society
 Helps administration to take prompt decision
 Helps to improve the standards in nursing
education
 Refines the existing theories & helps in
discovery of new theories
 For its prestige
 To describe the state of affairs
 To isolate problem areas
 To determine solutions for problems
 To contribute to knowledge
 To collect facts
 To analyze standards
 To guide for action
Areas of Nursing research
 Education
 Administration
 Clinical
Need for nursing research in India
 For prestige of profession
 To isolate problem areas
 To determine solutions for problem
 To collect facts
 To contribute to knowledge
 To analyze standards
 To guide for actions
Role of Nurses in
Research
Dr. Meena Ganapathy
Role of nurses in research
 Research participant – Clara Maass, a nurse
(1876- 1901) participated in a study to isolate
vector mosquito for yellow fever. She died of the
disease
 Lots of nurses are participants of the HIV
vaccination trial at NARI, Pune.
 Research Advocate: Nurses can make the
participants aware of their rights , risk, benefit &
assurance of confidentiality & anonymity
 E.g.., West Bengal study on injectable
contraceptives.
Role of nurses in research
 Research assistant: assisting in data
collection & data analysis
 Research evaluator: able to read reports &
evaluate its relevance & apply it to
nursing practice
 Research expert: nurses with masters &
doctoral degrees may act as experts
 Investigator: conduct actual research
Role of a registered nurse in
research
 Read, interpret & utilize research in work
area
 Identify areas of need & conduct mini
research
 Collaborate with other researchers
 Act as an advocate for participants
Role of an educator in research
 Use findings to teach latest information
 Can use other field researches to improve
teaching & methods
 Instigate research zeal in her students
 Guide students in their mini research
Role of an administrator in research
 Being aware of resources & making it available
to nurses
 Providing a climate for research
 Conducting regular journal clubs to critique
articles
 Allowing staff to attend conferences &
presentations
 Participating in institutional ethical committee
 Collaborating with other clinical researches
 Reviewing research plans for feasibility
 Evaluate completed research for practice
Using Research in Practice

 Synthesis of knowledge (research, theory,


and clinical experiences)
 Effect of philosophy
 Making a change in practice
 Evaluation of change for patient, provider,
and health care system
Role of an researcher
 Can become a trained research worker
Characteristics of good research
 Characteristics of a Good Research
 Interesting & Novel
 Clear & comprehensive with attention to detail,
and a certain level of knowledge of the subject
matter.
 ethical in all methodologies
 Should guarantee conclusive and objective
results.
Characteristics of good research
 Systematic
 Organized
 All elements are clearly & precisely
described
 Has a definite objective with due control
 analyses data using statistical procedure
 generalization to population is possible
Characteristics of good research
 findings can be verified by replication
 Follows principles of research ethics
 Relevant
 Instruments used are valid & reliable
 No plagiarism. Duly acknowledges relevant
sources used
 Documented following some standard protocol
 Published
Terminologies
Dr.Meena Ganapathy
Terminologies
 Concept: A mental or word picture of a
phenomenon that is based on presence or
absence of certain characteristics
 Conceptual framework: a network of inter related
concepts that provide a structure for organizing
& describing the phenomena of interest
 Control: The process of preventing extraneous
variables influence on the dependent variable,
which might alter the true effect between the
study variables
 Data: The pieces of information collected
that pertains to the study variables
 Hypothesis: A hunch or a statement of
expected relationship between the
independent & dependent variable
 Limitations: Weakness in a study, such as
uncontrolled variables, that limit the
generalizability of the findings
 Operational definition: The definition or
description of a study variable that
specifies how it will be measured
 Research: A scientific process of inquiry
that involves purposeful, systematic, and
rigorous collection, analysis, and
interpretation of data to gain new
knowledge
 Theory: A set of interrelated concepts that
provide a systematic method of
organizing, integrating and conceptualizing
a phenomenon
 Theoretical / Conceptual definition: The
definition or description of a study variable
that is drawn from the theoretical or
conceptual framework
 Variable: A characteristics or attribute that
varies or differ among the persons or
objects being studied
 Generalizability: The ability to relate the
study findings from the sample to large
population
Basic Terminology
 Quantitative Research – objectivity,
control, numerical data & ability to
generalize findings
 Qualitative Research – subjective,
narrative nonnumeric data
 Researcher-investigator, scientist,
principal investigator, project director,
collaborators
 Variables: A characteristic or attribute that
varies or differs among persons or objects
under study
 Instrumentation: process of selecting or
developing devices & methods appropriate
for measuring variables under study.

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