【2000-2005年已发表的护理研究中行动研究的吸收和设计的系统综述】。

IF 0.2 Q4 NURSING
Recherche en soins infirmiers Pub Date : 2010-03-01
Carol Munn-Giddings, Andrew McVicar, Lesley Smith
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引用次数: 0

摘要

行动研究(AR)促进了医疗保健发展。对基于实践的AR的接受和设计进行了系统的回顾。2000年至2005年的实证研究论文摘自CINAHL、MEDLINE和英国护理指数,以及两份专业AR期刊。最初的搜索确定了335篇论文:38%是AR(20%是现象学;32%是民族志;10%是随机对照试验)。进一步的过滤产生了62篇AR论文用于详细分析。87%的AR研究涉及“组织/专业发展”或“教育”环境;只有13%是直接“临床”的。从业者是90%研究的主要参与者。72%的参与者群体在研究过程中被评为“积极”,但70%的第一(主要)作者来自学术机构。患者/护理人员在研究过程中通常是被动的,没有署名。90%的研究使用了两种或两种以上的方法,主要是定性的。44%的文章确定了外部资金来源,这对护理研究来说相对较高。参与式AR在基于实践的研究中具有强大的身份,方法多样。重点反映了护理学研究的普遍性。从业者的参与程度很高,但对作者的询问很少。研究人员应更加重视服务使用者/护理人员的参与。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[Systematic review of the uptake and design of action research in published nursing research, 2000-2005].

Action Research (AR) is promoted for health care development. A systematic review was undertaken to gain insight into the uptake and designs of practice-based AR. Empirical research papers from 2000 to 2005 were extracted from CINAHL, MEDLINE and British Nursing Index, and two specialist AR journals. The initial search identified 335 papers: 38% were AR (20% were phenomenology; 32% ethnography; 10% randomised-controlled trials). Further filtering produced 62 AR papers for detailed analysis. Eighty-seven percent of AR studies involved 'organisational/professional development', or 'educational' settings ; only 13 % were directly 'clinical'. Practitioners were the main participants in 90% of studies. Seventy-two percent of all participant groups were rated 'active' in the research process, yet 70% percent of first (lead) authors were from an academic institution. Patients/carers were generally passive in the research process and absent from authorship. Ninety per cent of studies used two or more methods, predominantly qualitative. Forty-four percent of articles identified external funding sources, relatively high for nursing research. Participatory AR has a strong identity in practice-based research, with a diversity of methods. The focus reflects that of nursing research generally. A high level of participation by practitioners is evident but with little enquiry in authorship. Service user/carer involvement should be given more prominence by researchers.

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