Affiliation:
1. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Abstract
Increased demand for medical or healthcare services has meant that nurses are to take on a more proactive and independent role intending to patients, providing basic treatment and deciding relevant clinical practice. This, in turn, translates into the need for nurses to be able to translate research and evidence into their practice more efficiently and effectively. Hence, competencies in looking for, evaluating, synthesizing and applying documented information or evidence-based practice becomes crucial. This article presents a quantitative study that involved more than 300 nurses from a large government hospital in Singapore. A self-reporting questionnaire was developed to collect data pertaining to evidence-based practice and activities, including those that demonstrate information literacy competencies. Results seem to suggest that the nurses preferred to use print and human information sources compared to electronic information sources; were not proactive in looking up research or evidence-based information and, instead, preferred such information to be fed to them; and that they perceived they lacked the ability to evaluate research papers or effectively search electronic information related to nursing or evidence-based practice. It was also found that more than 80% of the nurses have not had any training related to evidence-based practice.
Reference16 articles.
1. Expertise in Nursing Practice
2. Developing information literacy: a key to evidence-based nursing
3. Challenges for new nurses in evidence-based practice
4. American Library Association. Presidential Committee on Information Literacy–Final Report. Chicago: American Library Association, 1989.
5. Sackett DL, Richardson WS, Rosenberg WM, Haynes RB. Evidence-based medicine: How to practice and teach EBM. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, 1997.
Cited by
31 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献