Transcript Document

Research Committee Module #2
1 CNE Available
Created by Kathryn Spiegel RN PhD
There is no conflict of interest in the creation of this education program.
Objectives
 Explain the rationale for a literature
review
 Review the scope of the literature review
 Discuss the types of literature included in
a comprehensive review
 Demonstrate knowledge of web-based
resources for nephrology nursing
research
Purpose
 Brings the researcher up to date with
information on a specific topics
 Forms the basis of justification for future
research in the area of interest
 Seeks to describe, summarize, evaluate,
clarify and/or integrate the content of
primary reports
Reasons for Conducting a
Literature Review
 Presents a theoretical framework
 Provides a bibliography, analytical and
critical appraisal of current literature
 Refines, improves and adds to the body
of knowledge
 Informs and lends support to the
researcher’s assumptions, definitions
 Reviews previous scholarly and
scientific work
Wilson, H.S. (1992). Introduction to nursing research (2nd ed.). Menlo Park, CA: Addison-Wesley.
Types of Literature

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Relevant nursing research
Theoretical literature
General and specialty nursing literature
Methodological literature
Research literature from other
disciplines
 Popular literature
Wilson, H.S. (1992). Introduction to nursing research (2nd ed.). Menlo Park, CA: Addison-Wesley.
Resources
 Books
 Periodicals
(journals, magazines and
newspapers)
 Popular magazines
 Trade journals
 Scholarly journals
 Medical libraries
Electronic Resources
 Software programs (RSS Feeds)
 Databases (CINAHL®)
 Popular (Google) and scientific
(PubMed) search engines
 Metasearch engines (Dogpile)
Boolean Operators
Purpose:
 Used to facilitate a review of the
literature
 Search is narrowed to those records
that contain each chosen keyword
 Common operators include:
• AND
• OR
• NOT
Boolean Operators
AND
Keyword
Keyword
C
Term A
Search A AND B = C
Term B
Boolean Operators
OR
Keyword
Keyword
Term A
Term B
Search A OR B broadens the search by searching for
alternate terms, synonyms and related concepts
Boolean Operators
NOT
Keyword
Term A
Keyword
C
Term B
Eliminates records which have an
unwanted keyword in them
Software Programs
 RSS Feeds: RSS stands for Really Simple
Syndication.
RSS readers are software
programs that collect, organize and display
RSS feeds. RSS readers allow users to scan
headings from a multitude of journals or news
sites. The benefit of RSS is that content from
multiple Web sources is aggregated in one
place. RSS readers can be desk-top based or
web-based (Note - web-based readers require
no download).
• Some user-friendly web-based readers
are Google Reader, NetVibes, and FeedBucket.
Database Systems
CINAHL®
 Nursing and allied health literature
 Covers approximately 330 nursing and
allied health journal references
 Includes information on the title, author,
journal, volume number, issue number,
page numbers, date of issue, descriptors
that indicate the type of article (i.e.,
research), and number of references.
Search Engines
Search engines: An internet program that
searches for documents for specified
keywords and returns a list where these
keywords are found
• Dogpile
– http://www.dogpile.com
• PubMed
– http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez
PubMed
Basic steps to access:
 Identify the key concepts of the
research question.
 Enter the significant terms into the
search box.
 Press the “Enter” key or click “Go.”
National Institutes of Health (2007). National Library of Medicine.
from http://www.nih.gov/science/library.html.
PubMed
Information access:
– Date (or range of dates)
– Journal title
– Author
– Key words
National Institutes of Health (2007). National Library of Medicine.
Retrieved from http://www.nih.gov/science/library.html.
PubMed Limits Feature
Allows for more specific searches using
ranges within categories
- Full text or free full text
- Gender
- Languages
- Dates
- Topics
- Age group
- Human or animal studies
- Publication types
- Journal groups
Limits tab
Preview / Index tab
History tab
Clipboard
Details
Preview/Index Tab
Used to determine the number of
articles available on a particular topic
Search Most
Recent Queries
Time
Result
#2 Search anemia
13:34:23 141371
#1 Search dialysis
13:34:05 111628
History Tab
 Previous searches can be combined or
used in subsequent searches by using
the History tab.
 All search queries can be located under
the History tab. The query list is erased
after eight hours.
Clipboard Tab
 Clipboard is a storage page for
collecting selected citations from one
or several searches.
 Clipboard is lost after eight hours of
inactivity on PubMed or any of the
other databases.
Clipboard Tab
 The following process is used to add
citations to the Clipboard:
• In the search results, use the citation
check boxes to select citations. To save all
citations do not click any check boxes
• From the Send to menu, select Clipboard
• To view the selections, click the Clipboard tab
Using Boolean Operators
When using Boolean operators it is not
necessary to order the concepts, the
number of hits will be the same:
Search Most
Recent Queries
#2 Search anemia
AND dialysis
#1 Search dialysis
AND anemia
Time
Result
13:34:23
4926
13:34:05
4926
Using Boolean Operators
Searching for phrases using keywords and
quotations:
Search Most
Recent Queries
#2 Search “Iron deficiency
anemia in dialysis patients”
#1 Search
“iron deficiency anemia”
Time
Result
13:34:23
246
13:34:05
6170
Using the “+” Feature
 “+"Dialysis" Outcomes: search will
retrieve all documents containing the
words Dialysis, but no documents that
contain only the word Outcomes
 Documents containing Outcomes must
also contain Dialysis to be retrieved
Using a Wildcard
An “*” is the symbol for a Wildcard
 Allows for a search of words with
variations in spelling by using the * after
the first 3 letters of the word
 Following a keyword with an asterisk (*)
will search for the keyword and various
suffixes
 For a prefix, at least three letters of the
keyword are necessary before using an *
Using the Operator NOT
 Using the word "NOT" or a "-" before a
keyword will exclude any document
containing that term
 For example: NOT cultural diversity will
retrieve all documents containing the
word diversity, but from these
documents it will exclude all the results
that contain the phrase cultural
Using the Limits Feature:
Example
Research Question:
“Does a patient’s cultural background
influence adherence to dialysis
therapy?”
Research Question
“Does a patient’s cultural background influence adherence to dialysis therapy?”
Bolded words are key words in
this search
Key word may give
results on laboratory data
111,628 listings
5528 pages
culture AND dialysis
2827 listings
528 pages
culture AND dialysis AND adherence
Specifically address the
sociological effect of one’s
culture on the dialysis
experience
14 listings
1 page
Conclusions
 The literature search is one of the most
important steps in the research
process.
 A comprehensive review provides
education of and validation for the
research and the writing of scientific
publications.
References
Cooper, H.M. (1989). Integrating research: A
guide for literature reviews (2nd ed.). Newbury
Park, CA: Sage Publications.
National Institutes of Health. (2007). National
Library of Medicine. Retrieved from the web
site http://www.nih.gov/science/library.html.
Nieswiadomy, R.M. (1993). Foundations of
nursing research (2nd ed.). Norwalk, CT:
Appleton and Lange.
References
United States Department of Health and Human
Services (n.d.). National Center for
Biotechnology Information. Retrieved from
the web site
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez.
Wilson, H.S. (1992). Introduction to nursing
research (2nd ed). Menlo Park, CA: AddisonWesley.