Week 10 Flashcards

1
Q

Why do you think that some researches might be reluctant to adopt a mixed methods approach to their studies?

A
  • Professional/methodological protectionism
  • Traditional schooling, experience or expertise in just one or a few research approaches/methods
  • The need to become conversant with wider range of research theories and approaches
  • Reluctance to move away from the security of the major opinion or current trend in research methodology
  • Increased complexity that accompanies MM research
  • More limited chance of securing large-scale funding
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2
Q

What is Mixed Methods Research?

A

Research in which the investigator collects and analyses data, integrates the findings and draws inferences using both qualitative and quantitative approaches or methods in a single study.

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3
Q

Why conduct mixed methods research?

A

Seeking convergence and corroboration of results from different methods that are studying same phenomena

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4
Q

what is Methodological Triangulation and what is it used for?

A
  • Different methods of data collection used in same study
  • Triangulation : usually applied to qualitative research
  • Reduces error/increases rigor
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5
Q

What is the Value of Mixed Methods?

A
  • Potential for more complete & comprehensive research opportunity
  • Can give additional perspectives & insights beyond scope of single design
  • Weaknesses of one method may be counter-balanced by strengths of another
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6
Q

What are the Limitations of using Mixed Methods research?

A
  • Complex
  • Time consuming
  • Involved
  • Resource-intensive
  • Knowledge required of researchers- both qualitative & quantitative knowledge
  • Understanding & acceptance by research community needed
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7
Q

What is the Delphi Technique?

A
  • Uses expert opinion on a clinical practice problem
  • Non-empirical approach (ie no data collection)
  • Useful when experimental approach not feasible
  • Limitation: only represents opinion
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8
Q

What is a systematic review?

A

A summary of the research literature that is focused on a single question.

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9
Q

List some the characteristics of systematic review.

A
  • clearly articulated objectives and questions
  • detailed inclusion and exclusion
  • a comprehensive search
  • critical appraisal of the quality of included studies
  • data analysis (meta-analysis)
  • presentation and synthesis of the findings extracted
  • transparent reported methodology
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10
Q

Why do we use systematic reviews within the nursing practice?

A
  • make healthcare decisions
  • easy to replicate
  • widely used by professional and non professional groups
  • support clinical practice
  • save time
  • easy to access reliable information and short cuts in the EBP process
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11
Q

List the types of systematic reviews

A
  • qualitative
  • quantitative
  • mixed methods
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12
Q

What is the role of systematic reviews in EBN practice?

A

A process that nurses use to make clinical decisions and answer clinical questions based on the best available research evidence, their clinical expertise and patient preferences in the context of existing resources.

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13
Q

List some commonly used data-extraction tools.

A
  • paper and pencil
  • spreadsheets
  • web-based forms
  • electronic web-based database
  • local rational database
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14
Q

What are some limitations of systematic reviews?

A
  • badly conducted systematic reviews
  • bias on paper selection
  • influenced by researchers search skills
  • result might not be combined and presented properly
  • language limits
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