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Definition
CONSCIOUS AND INTENFUL USE OF RESEARCH AND THEORY-BASED INFORMATION TO MAKE DECISIONS ABOUT PATIENT CARE DELIVERY |
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KEY CONCEPTS OF NURSING RESEARCH -2- |
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Definition
1-MUST DECRIBE THE SYSTEMATIC GATHERING OF INFORMATION 2- MUST ADDRESS A GAP IN CURRENT KNOWLEDGE |
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-HOW DO WE QUANTIFY THE EXPERIENCE - UNDERSTANDING THE NATURE OF AN EXPERIENCE IN ORDER TO BE ABLE TO CONTROL AND PREDICT |
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-A STATISTICAL TERM INDICATING A LOW LIKELIHOODTHAT ANY DIFFERENCES OR RELATIONSHIPS FOUND IN A STUDY HAPPENED BY CHANCE -ENSURES THE FINDING WAS NOT BY CHANCE |
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PRIVIDES THE RESEARCHERS INTERPRETATIONS OF THE RESULTS |
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Definition
1-DEFINE THE PROBLEM 2- DEVELOP A PLAN 3- IMPLEMENT THE STUDY 4- ANALYZE AND INTERPRET 5-DISSEMINATION OF FINDINGS - MOST IMPORTANT |
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Definition
1- AKS THE BURNING CLINICAL QUESTION - PICO 2- COLLECT THE MOST RELEVANT AND BEST EVIDENCE 3- CRITICALLY APPRAISE THE EVIDENCE 4- INTEGRATE ALL EVIDENCE WITH ONE 'S EXPERTISE 5- EVALUATE THE PRACTISE DECISION |
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Definition
PATIENT/PERSON INTERVENTION COMPARISON OUTCOME |
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HIERARCHY OF EVIDENCE LEVEL 1 |
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Definition
• Highest standard that we have • Meta-analysis, systematic reviews • Systematic review of randomization studies • Evidenced based clinical practice |
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HIERARCHY OF EVIDENCE LEVEL 2 |
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Definition
• Evidenced obtained from at least one well-designed RCT • Randomization makes evidence more accurate
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HIERARCHY OF EVIDENCE LEVEL 3 |
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Definition
• Evidence obtained from well-designed controlled trials without randomization |
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HIERARCHY OF EVIDENCE LEVEL 4 |
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Definition
• Evidence from well-designed case- control and cohort studies |
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HIERARCHY OF EVIDENCE LEVEL 5 |
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Definition
• Evidence from systematic reviews of descriptive and qualitative design |
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HIERARCHY OF EVIDENCE LEVEL 6 |
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Definition
• Evidence from a single descriptive or qualitative study |
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HIERARCHY OF EVIDENCE LEVEL 7 |
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Definition
• Evidence from the opinion of authorities and/or reports from expert committees. • Like American geriatric society • Can be very strong advice and guidelines
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Definition
THE FIRST OVERARCHING QUESTION THAT WE COME UP WITH |
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THE FINAL PRODUCT IS VERY SPECIFIC IN WHAT IT IS ASKING |
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CONTAINS WHAT WILL BE EXAMINED |
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CONTAINS WHY THE STUDY IS BEING CONDUCTED |
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Definition
- THE PREDICTOR VARIABLE - IT IS WHAT YOU ARE GOING TO MANIPULATE, AND SEE HOW IT CHANGES YOUR DEPENDENT VARIABLE |
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Definition
- IS THE OUTCOME VARIABLE - IS THE ONE AFFECTED BY THE USE OF THE INDEPENDENT VARIABLE |
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LITERATURE REVIEW SECTION |
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Definition
- FOCUSED SUMMARY ON WHAT HAS ALREADY BEEN PUBLISHED ON THE SUBJECT - PROVIDES A PICTURE OF WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN - IS THERE ANYTHING GLARINGLY MISSING? |
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THEORETICAL/CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK |
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Definition
- IT WILL HELP YOU DETERMINE IF THE RESEARCH DESIGN MATCHES/FITS THE RESEARCH QUESTION - IS IT QUALITATIVE/QUANTITATIVE? |
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Definition
- THE QUESTION THAT DIRECTS THE STUDY -EXPLAINS HOW THE VARIABLES ARE BEING EXAMINED |
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Definition
FROMAL STATEMENT OF THE EXPECTED RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TWO OR MORE VARIABLES |
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Term
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS -4- |
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Definition
1-ETHNOGRAPHY 2-GROUNDED-THEORY 3-PHENOMENOLOGY 4-HISTORICAL |
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QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH DESIGNS -5- |
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Definition
1- DESCRIPTIVE 2- CORREALATIONAL 3- COHORT 4 - CASE-CONTROL 5- EXPERIMENTAL |
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DESCRIPTIVE RESEARCH DESIGN |
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Definition
QUANT -JUST DESCRIBES WHAT HAPPENS |
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CORREALATIONAL RESEARCH DESIGN |
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Definition
QUANT -DESCRIBES THE RELATIONSHIP |
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CASE-CONTROL RESEARCH DESIGN |
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Definition
QUANT -RETROSPECTIVE -COMPARES ONE GROUP WITH TO ANOTHER WITHOUT |
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QUANT -FOLLOW A GROUP LONGITUDINALLY OVER TIME -PROSPECTIVE |
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EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH DESIGN |
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Definition
HAS A CONTROL GROUP AND RANDOMLY ASSIGNED SAMPLE |
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QUASI-EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH DESIGN |
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Definition
DOES NOT HAVE A CONTROL GROUP AND SAMPLE IS NOT RANDOMLY ASSIGNED |
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Term
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Definition
-THEY DESCRIBE SOMETHING -NUMBER OF PXS, MALE/FEMALE -COULD BE NUMBERS OR PERCENTAGES -WILL BE FOUND IN ANY KIND OF RESEARCH ARTICLE |
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Definition
- MAKES INFERRENCES ABOUT POPULATIONS OFF SMALLER AMOUNTS OF DATA - THE STATS ALLOW YOU TO MAKE PREDICTIONS/GENERALIZATIONS - |
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Definition
1- NOMINAL - CATEGORICAL 2- ORDINAL - CATEGORICAL 3- INTERVAL - CONTINOUS 4- RATIO - CONTINUOUS |
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Definition
-ASSIGN NUMBERS TO CATEGORIES -ORDERING OF NUMBERS NOT MEANINGFUL - ALLOWS YOU TO QUANTIFY NON-NUMERICAL DATA 0-CAT 1-DOG 2-FEMALE 3-MALE |
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Definition
- ASSIGN NUMBERS SO ORDER IS MEANINFUL -INTERVALS BETWEEN NUMBERS IS NOT CONSISTANT 1-FRESHMAN 2-SOPHMORE 3-JUNIOR 4-SENIOR |
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Definition
-ASSIGN NUMBERS IN MEANINGFUL ORDER, WITH EQUAL DISTANCES BETWEEN POINTS OF MEASURE -ZERO IS NOT MEANINGFUL - LIKE TEMPERATURE |
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Definition
-MEANINGFUL ORDER, EQUAL DISTANCE BETWEEN POINTS -DOES HAVE AN ABSOLUTE ZERO POINT -HEIGHT/WT -THERE ARE NOT ANY NEGATIVE NUMBERS |
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Definition
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=MIDPOINT OF ALL VALUES OR SCORES -SHOWS OUTLIERS |
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=VALUE THAT OCCURS MOST FREQUENTLY OUT OF LIST OF SCORES |
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Definition
MAJORITY FALL IN THE MIDDLE -EXTREMES ARE RARE |
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Definition
PUTS ALL OF THE DATA ON A SCALE -BELL CURVE |
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Definition
HOW MUCH DOES EACH SCORE DIFFER FROM THE MEAN VALUE -STANDARD DEVIATION -THE BIGGER THE STANDARD DEVIATION, THE BIGGER VARIANCE YOU HAVE. |
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Definition
• Researcher immerses self into the culture to describe a phenomenon within the context of that culture, providing BOTH insider and outsider view |
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Definition
• Study interactions to understand and recognize links between ideas/concepts • Theory development
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Term
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Definition
LOOK AT AN EXPERIENCE FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF THOSE THAT ARE EXPERIENCING IT. |
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Definition
-• Answer a question by looking back in time to see what was done before to cause what is happening now • How did we get here? • Look at what variables that were in place that led us here to prevent it in the future |
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Definition
INTRODUCED TO NEW CHANGE OR QUESTION |
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Definition
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Definition
• Strategies to ensure every member of population of interest has an equal opportunity to be in the study |
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Definition
• Do not assure that everyone in population will have chance to be in study, more practical, plausible, or possible than probability |
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Term
RANDOM SAMPLE -PROBABILITY- |
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Definition
DEFINE THE POPULATION, AND THEN RANDOMLY SELECT FROM IT |
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Term
STRATIFIED RANDOM SAMPLING -PROBABILITY- |
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Definition
• Looking at two groups that are different from each other and you want to make sure you get equal numbers from each group • Race is a good example of when to use this method
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Term
CLUSTER RANDOM -PROBABILITY- |
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Definition
LOOKING AT A PROBLEM THAT IS LARGE AND WIDESPREAD. -SAMPLING FROM SMALLER REPRESENTATIVE GROUPS IN MAJOR AREAS AS A SAMPLE. |
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Term
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Definition
• Group of people that you randomly select the first person like number 83 out of 100. • Then instead of randomly selecting the other 24 that you need to make a study of 25. • You must have previously decided to take every fourth number after 83.
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Definition
• If the question asked about UoP nursing students, you would have to choose from UoP students. • Question applies to just one group
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Definition
• Question doesn’t focus on one narrow group, but the researcher has access to one narrow group. |
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Term
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Definition
-QUALITATIVE EQUIVILANT TO STRATIFIED RANDOM SAMPLING¢ |
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Term
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Definition
-QUALITATIVE SAMPLING -STARTS WITH ONE PERSON AND THEN SPREADS BY WORD OF MOUTH UNTIL YOU HAVE ENOUGH OF A SAMPLE SIZE |
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Definition
• A probability method • All members of a population had the opportunity to be in the sample
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Definition
• Randomly assign participants to different groups |
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Definition
DETERMINED BY THE NEED THAT WILL ALLOW THE RESEARCHER TO MAKE GENERALIZATIONS ON THE PUBLIC -USUALLY DONE BY A POWER ANALYSIS |
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Definition
DEPENDS ON HOW COMPLEX THE QUESTION IS -HOW COMPLEX IS THE PHENOMENON |
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Definition
• The difference between the gathered sample data and what theoretical data would show • The data is skewed • Not under research control • Intervention group and control group would have same skewed numbers
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Definition
• Not taking cautious steps to ensure a truly random sample • Is under the researchers control • Only the intervention group has skewed numbers
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Term
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Definition
1-SELF DETERMINIZATION 2-PRIVACY AND DIGNITIY 3-ANONYMITY AND CONFIDENTIALITY 4-FAIR TREATMENT 5-PROTECTION FROM DISCOMFORT AND HARM |
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Term
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Definition
o Consent is given when a person is fully aware of the implication of participation o Assent is obtained when CONSENT is given by a guardian because the participant is unable to provide consent
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Term
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Definition
NO ONE CAN LINK THE DATA WITH THE PERSON -INCLUDING THE RESEARCHER |
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Definition
ENSURES THE IDENTITY CANNOT BE SHARED WITH ANYONE ELSE |
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Definition
o A rigorous structuring of defined concepts and statements that present a systematic view of phenomena that can be used to describe, explain, predict, and control the phenomenon |
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Definition
o A complex mental formulation of an experience -THE TOTALITY OF WHAT IS PERCEIVED |
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CONCEPTS ARE MADE UP OF 3 THINGS |
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Definition
1-THE WORD 2-THE THING 3-THE EMOTIONAL RESPONSE WE HAVE TO THE THING |
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LEVELS OF THEORETICAL THINKING -4- |
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Definition
1-MICRORANGE THEORY - VERY SPECIFIC 2-MIDDLERANGE THEORY - PRACTICAL APPLICATION 3-GRAND THEORY - OVERARCHING PRACTISE 4-META-THEORY - OVERARCHING/ENCOMPASSING |
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Definition
UNDERSTANDING PARTICIPANTS MEANING OF PHENOMENON -WHAT LANGUAGE IS USED TO DESCRIBE AN EXPERIENCE |
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Definition
STATISTICAL TEST USED TO EXAMINE HOW MUCH TWO VARIABLES ARE CONNECTED TO CONSISTENT CHANGES IN ONE ANOTHER -WHEN VALUE FOR ONE VARIABLE CHANGES THE VALUE FOR THE OTHER VARIABLE CONSISTENTLY CHANGES IN A CERTAIN DIRECTION -REPORTED = r=.82, p<.05 o The further the value is from zero, the higher the correlation |
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Definition
BOTH VARIABLES GO EITHER UP OR DOWN TOGETHER |
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ONE VALUE GOES UP AND THE OTHER DOWN |
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-Gives the range of values that would occur 95% of the time for the relationship or difference found -The smaller the range, without zero, the more confident we can be that the test statistic reflects the true nature of the variable
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Term
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Definition
IS A TEST STATISTIC FOR DIFFERENCES THE MEANS OF TWO GROUPS |
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Definition
RESULTS ARE ONLY INTERSTING IF THEY TURN OUT IN A PARTICULAR DIRECTION |
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Definition
RESULTS WOULD BE INTERSTING IN EITHER DIRECTION |
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Definition
-X2 -EQUIVELANT OF T-TEST BUT USED ON CATEGOICAL INFORMATION -NOMINAL -ORDINAL |
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Term
TYPES OF DATA COLLECTION -5- |
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Definition
1-PHYSIOLOGICAL/BIOLOGICAL MEASURES 2-OBSERVATIONAL MEASURES 3-INTERVIEWS 4-QUESTIONNAIRES 5-RECORDS/AVAILABLE DATA |
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Term
PHYSIOLOGICAL/BIOLOGICAL MEASURES |
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Definition
TEND TO BE OBJECTIVE, PRECISE, AND SENSITIVE |
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Definition
OBSERVE, MUST DETERMINE WHAT IS TO BE OBSERVED AND HOW IT WIL BE RECORDED AND CODED |
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Definition
VERBAL MAY BE FACE-TO-FACE OPEN/CLOSED ENDED |
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Definition
PAPER/PENCIL GATERH DATA FROM INDIVIDUALS LIKERT SCALES |
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Definition
RATING SCALE LIKERT SCALE VISUAL ANALOG SCALE NUMBER RATING SCALE |
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Definition
LIST OF ORDERED SERIES OF VARIABLES MAY OR MAY NOT HAVE UNDERLYING CONTINUUM |
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Definition
MEASURES OPINIONS OR ATTITUDES ABOUT A CONCEPT A NUMBER ASSOCIATED WITH A LEVEL OF AGREEMENT, FREQUENCY, OR EVALUATION |
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Definition
LINE 100MM LONG WITH VERBAL ANCHORS AT EITHER END PERSON MARKS ON TH ELINE MEASURE WITH A RULER TO QUANTIFY THE VALUE |
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Definition
PERSON MARKS A NUMBER WHERE HE/SHE IS MAY USE VERBAL ANCHORS MOST COMMONLY USED IN NURSING |
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QUANT - RELIABILITY THREE TYPES |
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Definition
CONSISTENCY OF THE MEASURE 1-INTERRATER 2-TEST-RETEST 3- INTERNAL CONSISTENCY |
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Definition
QUANTITATIVE EXAMINE THE PERCENT OF AGREEMENT BETWEEN RATERS |
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Definition
QUANTITATIVE GOAL IS TO DETERMINE IF ITEMS ON A TEST ARE CONSISTENT WITH MEASURING ONLY ON DIMENSION OR CONCEPT -REPORTED AS CHRONBACH'S |
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Definition
QUANTITATIVE CORRELATE SCORES ON TEST AT TIME 1 TO TIME 2 TO SEE IF RELIABLE OVER TIME |
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QUANTITATIVE - VALIDITY THREE TYPES |
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Definition
MEASURE IS ACCURATE MEASURE YIELDS INFORMATION ABOUT THE TURE OR REAL VARIABLE BEING STUDIED 1-CRITERION-RELATED 2-CONTRUCT VALIDITY 3-CONTENT VALIDITY |
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Definition
QUANTITATIVE RESULTS OF THIS MEASURE MATCH THOSE WITH OTHER KNOWN TO CAPTURE THE SAME CONCEPTS |
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Definition
QUANTITATIVE MEASURES WHAT IT IS "SUPPOSED" TO MEASURE MOST DIFFICULT TO DEMONSTRATE |
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Definition
QUANTITATIVE COMPHREHENSIVENESS AND APPROPRIATENESS OF CAPTURING CONCEPT EXTABLISED BY PANEL OF EXPERTS |
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QUALITATIVE RELIABILITY/VALIDITY = RIGOR FOUR TYPES |
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Definition
1-CREDIBILITY - WOULD PARTICIPANTS RECOGNIZE THE EXPERIENCE AS THEIR OWN 2- AUDITABILITY - ARE MEASURES TAKEN THAT WOULD ALLOW ANOTHER PERSON TO FOLLOW THE RESEARCHERS THINKING 3-FITTINGNESS - ARE THE FINDINGS APPLICABLE IN OTHER SITUATIONS 4-REFLEXIVITY - DOES THE AUTHOR DISCUSS HIS/HER EFFECT ON RESEARCH OR FINDINGS? |
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Definition
ANALYSIS OF VARIANCE TESTS DIFFERENCES IN MEANS AMOUNG TWO OR MORE GROUPS EQUIVALENT OF RUNNING A SERIES OF T-TESTS, YET LIMITS THE AMOUNT OF POSSIBLE ERROR REQUIRES POST-HOC ANALYSIS TO INTERPRET FINDINGS |
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