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Exploring Nursing Research in Canada

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Title: Exploring Nursing Research in Canada


1
Exploring Nursing Research in Canada
  • Class One
  • September 16, 2009
  • Judith Shaw, Ph.D.,R.N.

2
What is research?
  • to search again
  • diligent and systematic inquiry
  • to discovery

3
Define
  • Nursing Research

4
Nursing Research
  • a scientific process that
  • validates and refined existing
  • knowledge, and
  • generates new knowledge that
  • directly and indirectly
  • influences nursing practice

5
Nursing Research
  • Provides the scientific basis for the
  • practice of the profession.
  • (American Association of College of Nursing)

6
Definition of Nursing Research
  • Requires an understanding
  • of
  • what knowledge is relevant for nursing-

7
Definition of Nursing Research
  • Specifically-
  • what knowledge is needed to improve
  • nursing practice
  • (Burns Grove, 2007)

8
Metaparadigm
  • A global statement that identifies the
  • subject matter of each discipline or field
  • of study.
  • (Fawcett, 2005)

9
Metaparadigm ofNursing
  • Human beings
  • The environment
  • Health
  • Nursing

10
Nursing Research
  • A formal, systematic, and rigorous process of
    inquiry used to generate and test theories about
    the health-related experiences of human beings
    within their environments and about the actions
    and processes that nurses use in practice
  • (Fawcett Garity, 2009)

11
ComparisonNursing Process Nursing Research
  • Selection of a social context
  • Formulation of research question explication of
    researchers beliefs
  1. Assessment Interpretation of Data
  2. Diagnosis of problem

12
ComparisonNursing Process Nursing Research
  • Development and
  • implementation of
  • plan of care
  • Develop and implement methodology plan
  • Cyclical process of data collection, analysis,
    and concept formation and modification

13
ComparisonNursing Process Nursing Research
  1. Evaluation of plan of care
  • Interpretation of findings
  • May involve review of literature at this stage
  • Validation of findings with participants

14
ComparisonNursing Process Nursing Research
  1. Revision of plan based on evaluation
  • Communication of the findings.
  • Implications and recommendations

15
  • OR

16
Nursing Process ?Nursing Research (Fawcett,
2005)
  1. Assessment
  2. Planning
  3. Implementation
  4. Evaluation
  5. Documentation
  • Statement of the problem
  • Research Methods
  • Conduct of the Research
  • Interpretation of results
  • Research Report

17
The Importance of Research in Nursing
  • Description
  • (what is)

18
The Importance of Research in Nursing
  • Explanation
  • (relationship nursing interventions
    with client outcomes)

19
The Importance of Research in Nursing
  • Prediction
  • (probability of a certain outcome in a specific
    situation)

20
The Importance of Research in Nursing
  • Control
  • (to produce the desired outcome)

21
Kinds of Nursing Knowledge
  • Traditions
  • Authority
  • Borrowing
  • Trial and Error
  • Personal Experience
  • Role-Modeling
  • Intuition
  • Reasoning
  • Research

22
Epistemology
  • -the study of the nature of knowledge
  • How we know what we know

23
Ways of Knowing
  • Aesthetics
  • Ethical Knowing
  • Personal Knowing
  • Empirical Knowing (Carper, 1978)
  • Socio-Political (White, 1995)
  • Unknowing in Knowledge (Heath,1998 Munhall,
    1993)

24
Aesthetics
  • The nature of beauty or art
  • art of nursing

25
Ethical Knowing
  • The obligation, moral component
  • what should be done
  • what is good, right and desired

26
Personal Knowledge
  • Interpersonal interactions and relationships
    between the nurse and a client
  • therapeutic use of self
  • authentic personal relationship

27
Empirical Knowledge
  • Knowledge of the experienced or empirical world

28
Socio-Political
  • Situates nursing practice in the world of
    society, community life, culture, economics, and
    politics
  • Whos voice is heard?
  • Whose voice is silenced.

29
Unknowing in Knowledge
  • All knowledge is tentative and dynamic.
  • Openness, qualitative receptivity to what may be
    learned.
  • Not all important questions have been asked.
  • Many answers to both scientific and philosophical
    questions remain elusive.

30
How does nursing thought flow from both
concrete to abstract thinking?
31
The World of Nursing Research
  • Philosophy Abstract
  • Knowledge
  • Science Abstract Theory
  • Thought Processes
  • Reality Testing
  • (Research)
  • Empirical World
  • (Nursing Practice) Concrete

32
Research Nursing Knowledge
  • More reliable
  • vs.
  • Other Kinds of Nursing Knowledge

33
Philosophy in Nursing Research
  • Framework for identifying central concept
  • Assumptions for theory development
  • Relates nursing to practice world
  • Information on how to learn about the world

34
Philosophical Position
  • Qualitative Research
  • Approaches

35
Assumptions
  • - interpretive worldview
  • multiple realities
  • - many sources of information
  • - knowing how social experience constructs
    reality is important

36
Philosophy
  • philosophical research
  • notions question
  • of
  • scientific
  • truth

37
Philosophy
  • Research Methods
  • Question of
  • Inquiry in
  • Nursing

38
Qualitative Research
  • Six Characteristics

39
1. Multiple Realities
  • The individual
  • - active participates in social action
  • - comes to know and understand
  • phenomena in very different ways

40
2. Multiple Ways of Understanding
  • Finding a method or approach
  • to
  • appropriately answer
  • the question

41
3. Participants Point of View
  • To present the participants view of reality
  • - understand the context of what is
  • researched

42
4. Context
  • Alter as little as possible

43
5. Researcher- Part of the Study
  • Researcher as instrument
  • -subjective bias

44
6. Reporting
  • Participants perspective
  • -rich, literary style
  • -participants quotes,
  • commentaries, and stories

45
Development of Nursing Science
  • Three perspectives
  • 1. Positivist
  • 2. Interpretive
  • 3. Critical Social Theory

46
Positivist Perspective
  • Strict rules of logic, truth, axioms,
  • and predictions

47
Interpretive Perspective
  • Reality is based on personal perceptions
  • What we know has meaning only within a given
    context

48
Critical Perspective
  • Human behavior consist of different groups
    attempting to enhance their interests at the
    expense of less powerful groups

49
Three Levels of Quantitative Research
  • Construct axiom Construct
  • relationship between constructs
  • Concept proposition Concept
  • relationship between concepts
  • Indicators hypotheses Indicators
  • different authors reverse these Gillis and
    Jackson (2002) reverse the order

50
Qualitative Research
  • Naming - discovering meanings in
  • contexts
  • - process and meaning are described

51
Qualitative ResearchCyclical Process
  • Researcher moves back and forth between the data
    collection and analysis stages
  • -to identify and describe the
  • participants perspective

52
QUESTIONS ASKED
HOW/WHAT
53
Triangulation
  • Use of multiple methods
  • to generate and collect data
  • about one phenomenon

54
Triangulation
  • Within-Methods
  • Between-Methods

55
Within-Methods Triangulation
  • Example
  • -different types of qualitative data collections
    strategies

56
Between-MethodsTriangulation
  • Example
  • - both qualitative/quantitative data collection
    procedures

57
Unit of Analysis
  • The element or set of elements selected to study
  • -individual
  • -aggregrate group, community

58
LINK OF PRACTICE, THEORY, AND RESEARCH
  • Practice
  • Theory Research

59
NURSING RESEARCH PRIORITIES
  • To Improve
  • Nursing as a Profession
  • Nursing Practice
  • Patient Outcomes

60
Quantitative QualitativeResearch
Characteristics
  • Quantitative Research
  • Hard Science
  • Focus Concise Narrow
  • Reductionistic
  • Objective
  • Reasoning Logistic, Deductive
  • Basis of Knowing Cause Effect, Relationships
  • Qualitative Research
  • - Soft Science
  • - Focus Complex Broad
  • - Holistic
  • - Subjective
  • - Reasoning Dialectic, Inductive
  • - Basis of Knowing Meaning, Discovery

61
Quantitative Qualitative Research
Research
  • Tests Theory
  • Control
  • Instruments
  • Basic Element of Analysis Numbers
  • Statistical Analysis
  • Generalization
  • Develop Theory
  • Shared Interpretation
  • Communication Observation
  • Basic Element of Analysis Words
  • Individual Interpretation
  • Uniqueness

62
RESEARCH-MINDEDNESS
63
Research-based Practice
64
Deterrents to Conducting Research
65
Deterrents to Conducting Research
  • limited number of nurses prepared to conduct
    research
  • nurse researchers may not be involved with or
    knowledgeable about nursing practice
  • difficulty in asking the research question

66
Deterrents to Conducting Research
  • lack of congruency between research purposes and
    research methods
  • insufficient time
  • access to patients

67
Deterrents to Disseminating Applying Research
  • Understanding by practicing nursing
  • Faculty not involved in research
  • Lack of scientific rationale/nursing textbooks
  • Inadequate preparation

68
Promotion of Research Research-Based Practice
  • Increase number of B Sc..N, Masters doctoral
    prepared nurses
  • Emphasize students learn to critique research for
    quality data
  • Develop a climate that rewards research

69
Promotion of Research Research-Based Practice
  • Strengthen collaboration of practice/research/educ
    ation
  • Research-based protocols
  • Research interest groups
  • Increase opportunities for publishing

70
FINANCING NURSING RESEARCH IN CANADA
71
Federal Support for Research
  • 3 categories research grants, research
    fellowships, auxiliary grants (indirect )
  • 1971-McGill, first Center for Nursing research
  • gradual increase in funding
  • increase in doctoral programs/increase in
    research

72
FUNDING
  • Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
    Medical Research Council, National Health
    Research Development Program
  • Charitable organizations
  • Canadian Nurses Fund
  • Canadian Health Services Research Foundation
    (CHSRF)
  • Social Science Humanities Research Council of
    Canada (SSHRC)
  • Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation

73
PRAXIS WITHIN NURSING
  • theory, practice and research
  • informing the others
  • to produce
  • powerful new forms of knowledge
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