Nurses' Perceptions of Interventions for the Management of Patient-Oriented Outcomes: A Key Factor for Evidence-Based Practice

Worldviews on Evidence-based Nursing
Souraya SidaniMary McAllister

Abstract

Various barriers and facilitators to implementing evidence-based interventions in practice have been acknowledged. Nurses' perspectives on these interventions were overlooked as potential factors that influence their uptake in practice. The purpose of this study was to explore nurses' perception of evidence-based interventions targeting patient-oriented outcomes. A mixed method design involving concurrent application of quantitative and qualitative approaches was used. Nurses (n = 56) working in acute and rehabilitation care settings completed the Intervention Acceptability scale and responded to open-ended questions. The scale presented information on the components, activities, dose, and mode of delivering evidence-based interventions targeting each patient-oriented outcome (fatigue, nausea and vomiting, dyspnea, pain, physical function, self-care) and items to rate the interventions on five attributes (relevance, applicability, frequency of use, likelihood, and comfort in implementation). The open-ended questions inquired about the appropriateness and resources needed to use the interventions in practice. The quantitative results indicated favorable perceptions of most interventions. Nurses rated acupressure, guided imagery,...Continue Reading

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Citations

May 17, 2018·The Canadian Journal of Nursing Research = Revue Canadienne De Recherche En Sciences Infirmières·Souraya SidaniMary Fox
Feb 18, 2017·The American Journal of Nursing·Rosemary C PolomanoCarla R Jungquist
May 28, 2021·The Canadian Journal of Nursing Research = Revue Canadienne De Recherche En Sciences Infirmières·Behdin Nowrouzi-KiaDeborah Tregunno

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