Literature DB >> 10403976

Evidence-based nursing: a stereotyped view of quantitative and experimental research could work against professional autonomy and authority.

C Bonell1.   

Abstract

In recent years, there have been calls within the United Kingdom's National Health Service (NHS) for evidence-based health care. These resonate with long-standing calls for nursing to become a research-based profession. Evidence-based practice could enable nurses to demonstrate their unique contribution to health care outcomes, and support their seeking greater professionalization, in terms of enhanced authority and autonomy. Nursing's professionalization project, and, within this, various practices comprising the 'new nursing', whilst sometimes not delivering all that was hoped of them, have been important in developing certain conditions conducive to developing evidence-based practice, notably a critical perspective on practice and a reluctance merely to follow physicians' orders. However, nursing has often been hesitant in its adoption of quantitative and experimental research. This hesitancy, it is argued, has been influenced by the propounding by some authors within the new nursing of a stereotyped view of quantitative/experimental methods which equates them with a number of methodological and philosophical points which are deemed, by at least some of these authors, as inimical to, or problematic within, nursing research. It is argued that, not only is the logic on which the various stereotyped views are based flawed, but further, that the wider influence of these viewpoints on nurses could lead to a greater marginalization of nurses in research and evidence-based practice initiatives, thus perhaps leading to evidence-based nursing being led by other groups. In the longer term, this might result in a form of evidence-based nursing emphasizing routinization, thus--ironically--working against strategies of professional authority and autonomy embedded in the new nursing. Nursing research should instead follow the example of nurse researchers who already embrace multiple methods. While the paper describes United Kingdom experiences and debates, points raised about the importance of questioning stereotyped views of research should have international relevance.

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10403976     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2648.1999.01044.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Adv Nurs        ISSN: 0309-2402            Impact factor:   3.187


  4 in total

Review 1.  Intuition and evidence--uneasy bedfellows?

Authors:  Trisha Greenhalgh
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  2002-05       Impact factor: 5.386

2.  Data collectors' field journals as tools for research.

Authors:  Marie-Luise Friedemann; Carlos Mayorga; Luz Dary Jimenez
Journal:  J Res Nurs       Date:  2011-09

3.  Effect assessment of evidence-based nursing in combination with clinical nursing pathway on nephrotic syndrome care in children: A protocol for systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Xia Yu; Cai-Yan Han
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2021-06-04       Impact factor: 1.817

4.  Effect of evidence-based nursing intervention on upper limb function in postoperative radiotherapy patients with breast cancer.

Authors:  Xin Wang; Qian Lai; Yuzhen Tian; Ling Zou
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2020-03       Impact factor: 1.817

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.