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Critical Care Nurse. 2006;26: 11-12
Copyright © 2006 by the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
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Editorial

NURSES’ USE AND UNDERSTANDING OF EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE: SOME PRELIMINARY EVIDENCE

Findings from a recently reported study on evidence-based practice (EBP) in nursing revealed both encouraging as well as concerning findings. The vast majority (90%) of the more than 500 registered nurses (RNs) who participated in the study reported using EBP. However, a substantial proportion (69%) of RNs also indicated they have only a low to moderate level of understanding of EBP.

Earlier this year, Sigma Theta Tau International (STTI), the Honor Society of Nursing, conducted an online, electronic survey of active RNs in the United States,1 issuing invitations via e-mail to nurses whose e-mail addresses were obtained from a trio of nurse marketing lists. A total of 565 nurses agreed to participate, affording a 95% confidence level in the representativeness of findings. A brief profile of respondents to the survey is provided in the TableGo.


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Profile of respondents in Sigma Theta Tau evidence-based practice survey (N = 565)

 
STTI2 defines EBP as "an integration of the best evidence available, nursing expertise, and the values and preferences of the individuals, families and communities who are served." The value of EBP lies in its ability to not only minimize the translation time required for implementation of research findings into nursing practice, but to help approximate the edges that lie among and between ritualistic practices, habitual approaches, personal preferences, anecdotal experiences, empirical data, and unequivocal statistical significance to support current nursing practice. Ideally, EBP provides critical care nurses with the best available evidence to support nursing care of acute and critically ill patients and their families.

Use of Evidence-Based Practice

The STTI survey results suggest that EBP is gaining not only recognition but also expanding application in nursing:

Understanding of Evidence-Based Practice

The STTI survey results also provide some preliminary indications that nurses’ familiarity and application of EBP principles are gaining some foothold:

Continuing Development in Evidence-Based Practice

Even as a preliminary snapshot of the extent to which EBP is making a meaningful presence in nursing, findings from the STTI survey highlight a number of issues that need to be addressed to maintain expansion of EBP, including the following:

Summary

Much needs to be done to supply critical care nurses with a comprehensive, ongoing, and readily accessible spectrum of information needed to provide optimal care to patients placed in their care. At the very least, we can assist in providing staff with background information and instructions related to the EBP process; in identifying currently available EBP resources such as those listed at STTI’s Web site (www.nursingknowledge.org, www.nursingsociety.org/education/ceonline.html), in the Worldviews on Evidence-Based Nursing journal (www.nursingsociety.org/worldviews), and throughout the Internet; and by designating opportunities for nurses to discuss, locate, analyze, and act upon evidence already available. Unless we take the initiative to instigate such measures, those 8% of nurses who seldom recognize a need to make these efforts may find themselves gradually conjoined to the 2% who never do.

References

  1. Sigma Theta Tau International. EBP Study: Summary of Findings. April 2006. Available at: http://www.nursingknowledge.org/go/study. Accessed October 3, 2006.
  2. Sigma Theta Tau International. Position Statement on Evidence-Based Nursing. Indianapolis, Ind: Sigma Theta Tau International; 2005. Available at: http://www.nursingsociety.org/research/main.html#ebp. Accessed October 3, 2006.
Grif Alspach, RN, MSN, EdD
Editor





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