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Nursing Research

Quantitative Terms

QuestionAnswer
Information acquired in a variety of ways that is expected to be an accurate reflection of reality. knowledge
Scientific process that vailidates and refines existing knowledge and generates new knowledge that directly and indirectly influences nursing practice nursing research
A person with expertise and power who is able to influence the opinions of others. authority
Integrative set of defined concepts and relational statements that present a way of explaining some segment of the empirical world and can be used to describe, explain, predict or control that segment of the world. theory
Insight or understanding of a situation or event as a whole that usually cannot be logically explained. intuition
Diligent, systematic inquiry to validate and refine existing knowledge and generate new knowledge. research
A coherent body of knowledge composed of research findings, tested theories, principles and laws for a specific discipline. science
Thinking oriented toward and limited by tangible things or events that are observed and experienced in reality. concrete thinking
The world experienced through our senses; the concrete portion of our existence; often called reality. empirical world
Thinking oriented toward the development of an idea without application to, or association with, a particular instance. abstract thinking
The conscientious integration of best research evidence with clinical expertiese and patient values and needs in the delivery of quality, cost-effective health care. evidence-based practice
The process of turning your attention inward toward your own thoughts to increase your awareness of the flow and interplay of feelings and ideas that occur. introspection
Belief system that provides a broard, global explanation of the world. philosophy
Extremely strong empirical knowledge generated from the systhesis of quality study findings that provides a basis for the best management of a practice problem. best practice evidence
Reasoning from the specific to the general inductive reasoning
Reasoning that involves the indentification and discrimination among many alternatives and viewpoints and that focuses on the process of debating alternatives. operational reasoning.
Reasoning from the general to the specific. deductive reasoning
Reasoning that involves identifying a problem and the factors influencing the problem, selecting solutions to the problem, and resolving the problem. problematic reasoning
Reasoning that is used to break the whole into parts that can be carefully examined, as can the relationships among the parts. logistic reasoning
Reasoning from a holistic perspective that involves examining factors that are opposites and making sense of them by merging them into a single unit or idea. dialectic reasoning
A type of quantitative research that provides an accurate portrayal or account of characteristics of a particular individual, situation, or group; these studies are often conducted when little is known about a phenomenon. Descriptive research
Research that is considered the most objective, systematic and controlled of the different types of quantitative research. experimental research
A type of qualitative research that involves describing an experience as a person lives it. phenomenological research
A formal, objective, systematic research process to describe, test relationships, or examine cause- and - effect in interactions among variables. quantitative research
Procedures that scientists have used, currently use, or may use in the future to pursue knowledge. scientific method
A type of quantitative research that involves the systematic investigation of relationships among two or more variables. correlational research
inductive research technique initally described by Glaser and Strauss that is useful in discovering what problems exist in a social scene and the processes people use to handle them. grounded theory research
Systematic, subjective research methodology used to describe life experiences and give them meaning. qualitative research
A type of quantitative research that involves examining cause and effect relationships but has a lower level of control than experimental research quasi-experimental research
Research that involves a narrative description or analysis of events that occurred in the remote or recent past. historical research
a type of qualitative research that involves the use of intellectual analysis to clarify meanings, make values manifest, indentify ethics, and study the nature of knowledge philosophical inquiry
A type of research that was developed within the discipline of anthropology for investigating cultures through an in-depth study of the members of the culture. ethnographic research
A theory that provides the basis for research that focuses on understanding how people communicate and how they develop symbolic meanings in society. critical social theory
A type of research conducted to examine the end result of care or to measure the change in health status of a patient to determine if the care is cost-effective and of high quality. outcomes research
Important new research methodology for examining the effectiveness of nursing interventions in achieving the desired outcomes in natural settings. intervention research
A structured, comprehensive systhesis of quantitative studies in a particular heatlh care area to determine the best research evidence available for expert clinicians to use to promote evidence-based practice. systematic review
The syntheis or summing of the findings across qualitative research reports to determine the current knowledge in an area. metasummary
A type of study that statistically pools the reults from previous studies into a single quantitative analysis that provides one of the highest levels of evidence for an intervention's efficacy. meta-analysis
A research synthesis process that includes the indentification, analysis, and synthesis of research findings from independent quantitative and qualitative studies to determine the current knowledge (what is known and not known) in a particular area. integrative review
A complex synthesis of qualitative research that provides a fully integrated, novel description or explanation of a target event or experience versus a summary view. metasynthesis
Considered first nurse researcher Florence Nightingale
First journal published in 1952 Nursing Research
ANA established by Council of Nurse Researchers 1972
Sigma Theta Tau sponsor many national conferences to communicate nursing studies since 1970 in this area nursing research
Promoted evidence based practice Archie Cochrane
Other research journals Scholarly Inquiry for Nursing Practice; Applied Nursing Research
NINR mission in 2007 conducting quality studies, systhesizing study findings into best research evidence.
New type of research initiated in 1980s and 1990s to determine the quality endpoints or results of care was called outcomes research
This requires the the conduct and synthesis of numerous high-quality studies to determine the current best research evidence available for implementation in practice best evidence practice
AHRQ - 1999 - identified two goals, they are: improve the quality and safety of patient carepromote the use of best research evidence
Healthy People, published in 2000, had two major foci, they are: health promotionillness prevention interventions
What is the second best type of research evidence that might be used to promote evidence-based practice in nursing? Meta-analysis
Statistical synthesis of study results meta-analysis
Summary of qualitative studies to determine what is known about the concept of health metasummary
Narrative integration of quantitative studies, qualitative studies and theoretical literature to determine what is currently known about the adaptation to chronic pain Integrative review
Synthesis of qualitative studies to provide a new perspective or theory about caring in nursing. metasynthesis
Synthesis of randomized controlled trials to determine the best pharmacological agent to use in the management of hypertension in the elderly? systematic review
Synthesis of a variety of independent quantitative and qualitative studies to determine the differences between associate and baccalaureate prepared RNs integrative review
Summary of qualitative studies to provide a basis for metasynthesis metasummary
Statistical analysis of the results of quantitative studies to determine the most effective pain assessment scale to use to assess pain in school age children meta-analysis
a synthesis process that includes both narrative and statistical analysis of studies systematic review
synthesis of original qualitative studies and metasummaries metasynthesis
Correlational research, is what type of method: quantitative
Descriptive reseach is what type of method: quantitative
Ethnographic research is what type of method: qualitative
Experimental research is what type of method quantitative
Critical social theory is what type of method qualitative
Grounded theory is what type of method qualitative
Historical research is what type of method qualitative
phenomenological research is what type of method qualitative
quasi-experimental research is what type of method quantitative
philosophical inquiry is what type of method qualitative
Uses research findings in practice with supervision AAS
Develops and coordinates funded research programs Postdoctorate
Critically appraises studies BS
Develops nursing knowledge through research and theory development DNS, PhD
Uses research findings to promote evidence-based practice BS
Collaborates in conducting research projects MS
Conducts funded independent research projects DNS, PhD, Postdoctorate
Directly linked to nursing research philosophy, theory, nursing practice, science, abstract thought process, knowledge, ways of knowing.
An organized written presentation of what scholars have published on a topic literature review
The first study that prompted the initiation of a field of research seminal study
A major project that generates knowledge that influences a discipline and sometimes society in general and marks an important stage of development in a field of research landmark study
Includes concept analyses, maps, theories, and conceptual frameworks that support a selected research problem and purpose theoretical literature
Literature published over time or in multiple volumes; they do not necessarily have a predictable publication date serial
subsets of serials with predictable publication dates, such as journals, which are published over time and are numbered sequentially for the years published periodicals
Includes relevan studies published in journals, in books, and online, as well as unpublished studies such as master's theses and doctoral dissertations. empirical literature
Research project completed by a master's student as part of the requirements for a master's degree thesis
an extensive, usually original, research project that is completed as the final requirement for a doctoral degree dissertation
knowledge derived from research empirical knowledge
A source that is written by the person who originated or is responsible for generating the ideas published. primary source
A source that summarizes or quotes content from primary sources secondary source
Database that consists of citations relevant to a specific discipline or amy be a broad collection of citations from a variety of disciplines bibliographic database
Alternative terms that authors might use to search for concepts or variables synonym
The combination of two or more concepts or synonyms in one search complex search
A process of extracting and defining concepts from theories in other disciplines Concept deviation
If A occurs, then B will occur, but there may be no indication that if B occurs, A will occur. asymmetical relationship
A set of highly abstract, related constructs that broadly explains phenomena of interest, expresses assumptions, and reflects a philosophical stance. conceptual model
A strategy for expressing a framework of a study that diagrammatically shows the interrelationship of the concepts and statements. conceptual map
Oriented toward the development of an idea without application to or association with a particular instance; independent of time and space. abstract thinking
A process of describing and naming a previously unrecognized concept. concept synthesis
Provides a variable or concept with connotative meaning and is established through concept analysis, concept deviation or concept synthesis. conceptual definition
Thinking that is oriented toward and limited by tangible things or events observed and experienced in reality. concrete thinking
A strategy through which a set of attributes or characteristics essential to the connotative meaning or conceptual definition of a concept are indentified. concept analysis
A term that abstractly describes and names an object or phenomenon. concept
May be positive, negative or unknown. direction of a proposition
Occurs only if a third variable or concept is present contingent relationship
A program of research that is important for building a body of knowledge related to the phenomena explained by a particular conceptual model Research tradition
Formal statement of the expected relationships between two or more variables in a specified population. hypothesis
Dictionary definition denotative definition
Expresses the likelihood that something will happen in a given situation and addresses relative rather than absolute causality probability statement
A relationship in which both variables and concepts occur simultaneously concurrent relationship
The degree to which the phenomenon is present in the population or to which the null hypothesis is false. effect size
Variables that bring about the effects of the intervention after it has occurred and thus influence theoutcomes of the study. mediator variable
The abstract, logical structure of meaning that guides development of the study and enables the researcher to link the findings to nursing's body of knowledge framework
The relationship between two variables or concepts will remain consistent regardless of the values of each of the variables or concepts. linear relationship
Composed of a specific proposition and a hypothesis or research question. hierarchical statement
Indicates that as one variable or concept changes, the other variable or concept changes in the opposite direction. negative relationship
can affect the occurrence, strength, or direction of a relationship. intervening variable
A highly abstract statement of the relationship between two or more concepts that is found in a conceptual model. general proposition
Declares that a given concept exists or that a given relationship occurs. existence statement
One variable or concept must occur for the second variable or concept to occur. necessary relationship
The relationship between two variables varies depending on the relative values of the variables. curvilinear relationship
Indicates that as one variable changes the second variable will also change in the same direction positive relationship
Statements of what always occurs in a particular situation such as scientific law deterministic relationship
Declares that a relationship of some kind exists beween two or more concepts proposition
Concept at a very high level of abstrction that has general meaning construct
An abstract statement that further clarifies the relationship beween two concepts relational statement
The amount of variation explained by the relationship strength of the relationship
Qualities, properties or characteristics of persons, things, or situations that change or vary and are manipulated, measured, or controlled in research. variables
A relationship in which one concept occurs later than the other Sequential relationship
A theory with valid and reliable methods of measuring each concept and relationship statments that have been tested repeatedly scientific theory
A theory recognized with the discipline as useful for explaining important phenomena substantive theory
A relationship in which a similar concept can be substituted for the first concept and the second concept will occur. substitutable relationship
The opposite of construction; to take apart. substruction
A deterministic relationship that describes what always happens in the absence of interfering conditions. tendency statement
If A occurs, B will occur and if B occurs, A will occur symmetrical relationship
States tht when the first variable or concept occurs, the second will occur regardless of the presence or absence of the other factors. sufficient relationship
A statement found in theories that are at a moderate level of abstraction and provide the basis for the generation of hypotheses to guide a study. specific proposition
Consists of an integrated set of defined concepts, existence statements, and relational statements tat present a view of a phenomenon and can be used to describe, explain, predict or control that phenomenon. theory
A process in which the framework of a published study is separated into component parts to evaluate the logical consistency of the theoretical system and the interaction of the framework with the study methodology. theoretical substruction
A theory that is newly proposed, has had minimal exposure to critical appraisal by the discipline and has had little testing. tentative theory
We use __________ to organize what we know about phenomenon. theories
Testing theory involves determining the ____of each relational statement in the theory. validity
__________ ______ are not generally considered testable. Concept models
A research framework is based on a ____ Theory
The strength of a relationship is sometimes referred to as the _________ effect size
Research findings are interpreted in terms of the study _______ Framework
In a framework, all _______ should be defined. Concepts
Concepts in conceptual models are referred to as _______ constructs
A _______ is more specific than a concept and is defined so that is measurable in a study. Variable
The _____ of a theory are tested through research. Propositions
Statements at the lowest level of abstraction are referred to as _______ hypotheses
The purpose of a conceptual map is to explain which concepts ________ to or paritally _______ an outcome Contribute and cause
A conceptual mat includes all the major ____ in a theory or framework linked together by _____ expressing the _______ proposed between the concepts. concepts, arrows, relationships
An organized program of research designed to build a body of knowledge related to a paricular conceptual model is referred to as a __________ ____________ research tradition
Created by: egoodrich
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