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Introduction To Evidence Based Nursing

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Title: Introduction To Evidence Based Nursing


1
Introduction To Evidence Based Nursing
  • By
  • Dr. Hanan Said Ali

2
Objectives
  • Define evidence informed nursing
  • Identify the main imperative for evidence
    informed nursing.
  • List the requirement of evidence informed
    nursing .
  • Identify how does it relate to clinical
    effectiveness and evidence based practice
  • Discuss how to Implement evidence informed
    practice.
  • Determine the Strengths of evidence.

3
What is evidence informed nursing
  • We use the term ( evidence informed nursing )
    in preference to evidence based nursing in
    order to recognizes that nurses are critical
    practitioners.
  • The nurse made a decision for actions which can
    be justified from knowledge base.

4
The main imperative for evidence informed
nursing
  • Proper use of evidence supports nurses in
    accounting for what they do.
  • Providing clinically effective patient care and
    being able to justify the procedures used , the
    care plan devised or the services provided by
    reference to authoritative evidence.

5
The main imperative for evidence informed
nursing
  • Making of decision about the care of individual
    patients and families, on the basis of the best
    available evidence
  • Integration of professional judgement and
    research evidence about effectiveness of
    interventions.

6
What it requires is that all nurses have
  • An understanding of the importance of practice
    being based on the most appropriate evidence on
    effectiveness.
  • Access to and the ability to use research
    findings.
  • The ability to evaluate research.
  • The ability to implement research finding in
    their own practice.

7
Evidence informed nursing requires
  • The formulation of answerable questions that
    arise from practice- Reflection,
  • The searching of the literature or other relevant
    evidence sources Information,
  • The evaluation of the evidence for validity ,
    generalisability, and transferability - appraisal

8
Evidence informed nursing requires Cont.
  • The use of the best available evidence alongside
    clinical expertise and patient preferences in
    planning care - implementation,
  • The evaluation by practitioners of their own
    professional practice evaluation.

9
The evidence informed nursing cycle
10
How does it relate to clinical effectiveness and
evidence based practice
  • They refer , at least in part , to using research
    to inform practice and to ensure efficient and
    effective practice.
  • It refers to clinical effectiveness as applying
    the best available knowledge , derived from
    research , clinical expertise and patient
    preferences, to achieve the optimum processes and
    outcomes of care for patients.

11
How does it relate to clinical effectiveness and
evidence based practice
  • It is doing the right thing in the right way for
    the right patient at the right time.
  • There is a dissonance between the core beliefs of
    nursing and clinical effectiveness.
  • Nurses are committed to providing holistic care
    as opposed to care based on the biomedical model.

12
How does it relate to clinical effectiveness and
evidence based practice
  • Nurses are committed to treat patients as whole
    people and work with them rather on them.
  • Furthermore, effectiveness is only one element of
    the decision making process in deciding on the
    therapeutic intervention others include safety,
    acceptability , cost effectiveness and
    appropriateness.

13
Example
  • If he was diagnosed with cancer today and was
    faced with the decision about which type of
    chemotherapy to choose, would he want to know the
    evidence regarding the risks and benefits of each
    therapeutic agent as generated from prior
    clinical trials with other similar cancer
    clients?

14
Implementing evidence informed practice
  • To achieve evidence informed nursing a nurse
    needs to have
  • The research awareness skills and the knowledge
    and competence to interpret research material and
    to use it to inform their clinical decision-
    making.
  • A managerial and organisational culture that
    facilitate the implementation of research into
    clinical practice.

15
To implement evidence- informed practice the
nurse needs
16
1. Clinical expertise
  • Nurses are professionally accountable for the
    effectiveness of the care they provide and
    imposes on them a duty to monitor and improve
    their knowledge and competence

17
1. Clinical expertise Cont.
  • The nurses have began to recognise the importance
    of evidence- informed practice and the need to
    have the skills to assess the research literature
    and implement findings in their own day to day
    practice.

18
2. Knowledge of research evidence
  • There is increased emphasis on using the latest
    and highest- quality evidence to inform clinical
    practice and service delivery to improve health
    outcomes for individuals and the population as a
    whole.

19
2. Knowledge of research evidence Cont.
  • Evidence informed nursing is a systematic
    approach to providing nursing care that requires
    critical appraisal skills. While research
    evidence is at the centre of it, it does not
    require all nurses to be researcher

20
3. An understanding of patient preference and
choice
  • Patients and their families place their trust in
    nurses.
  • The nurse needs to assess the patients knowledge
    and understanding of their condition and involve
    them in the decision making process regarding
    their care.

21
3. An understanding of patient preference and
choice Cont.
  • The nurse needs to be able to access and
    critically appraise the evidence in relation to
    the care needs of each patient and communicate
    this information in a style most appropriate to
    the individual patient.

22
4. Access to adequate resources
  • For nursing to be evidence- informed, research
    needs to be accessible to nurses who understand
    the need to base their practice on research and
    who have the critical appraisal skills necessary
    to evaluate it. ,time to access it and skills to
    implement it.

23
Strengths of evidence
  • Evidence is categorized according to the overall
    research studies design in preventing bias from
    influencing the research finding.
  • What needs to be emphasised here is the value of
    the research in answering the proposed question.

24
The Five Strengths of Evidence
Class Strength of evidence
I Strong evidence from at least one systematic review of multiple well- designed randomised controlled trials
II Strong evidence from at least one properly designed randomised controlled trial of appropriate size.
III Evidence from well- designed trials without randomisation , single group pre- post, cohort, time series or matched case control studies.
25
The Five Strengths of Evidence Cont.
Class Strength of evidence
IV Evidence from well- designed non experimental studies from more than one centre or research group.
V Opinions of respected authorities based on clinical evidence, descriptive studies or reports of expert committees.
26
Best Evidence
  • Define the best research evidence?
  • Is define as
  • Clinically relevant research, often from the
    basic sciences of medicine, but especially from
    patient centered clinical research.
  • Without current best evidence , practice is
    rapidly outdated

27
Best Evidence Example
  • For years , pediatrics primary care providers
    advised parents to place their infant in prone
    position while sleeping, this is beast position
    to prevent aspiration of vomiting. With evidence
    indicating that prone positioning increase risk
    of sudden infant death syndrome, the American
    academic of pediatrics released the clinical
    practice guideline recommending a supine position
    for infant sleep.

28
Common Terminology in EBN
  • Patient value
  • The unique preferences, concerns and expectations
    each client brings to a clinical encounter and
    which must be integrated into clinical decisions
    if they are to serve the patient.

29
Common Terminology in EBN Cont.
  • Systematic review
  • A summary of the medical literature that uses
    explicit methods to perform a comprehensive
    literature search and critical appraisal of
    individual studies and that uses appropriate
    statistical techniques to combine these valid
    studies.
  • Cochrane collaboration
  • A worldwide association of groups who create and
    maintain systematic reviews of the literature for
    specific topic areas.

30
Common Terminology in EBN Cont.
  • Case-control study
  • A study which involves identifying patients who
    have the outcome of interest (cases) and patients
    without the same outcome (controls), and looking
    back to see if they had the exposure of interest.
  • Cohort Study
  • Involves identification of two groups (cohorts)
    of patients, one which received the exposure of
    interest, and one which did not, and following
    these cohorts forward for the outcome of interest

31
Common Terminology in EBN Cont.
  • Cross-sectional study
  • The observation of a defined population at a
    single point in time or time interval. Exposure
    and outcome are determined simultaneously.
  • Meta-analysis
  • A systematic review that uses quantitative
    methods to synthesize and summarize the results.

32
Common Terminology in EBN Cont.
  • Randomization (or random allocation) Method
    analogous to tossing a coin to assign patients to
    treatment groups (the experimental treatment is
    assigned if the coin lands heads and a
    conventional, control or placebo treatment is
    given if the coin lands tails).
  • Randomized control clinical trial (RCT)
    Participants are randomly allocated into an
    experimental group or a control group and
    followed over time for the variables/outcomes of
    interest

33
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