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Can Nursing Students Practice What Is Preached? Factors Impacting Graduating Nurses' Abilities and Achievement to Apply Evidence‐Based Practices
Author(s) -
Blackman Ian R.,
Giles Tracey M.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
worldviews on evidence‐based nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.052
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1741-6787
pISSN - 1545-102X
DOI - 10.1111/wvn.12205
Subject(s) - rasch model , evidence based practice , psychology , descriptive statistics , nursing , path analysis (statistics) , nurse education , variance (accounting) , medical education , medicine , alternative medicine , computer science , developmental psychology , statistics , mathematics , accounting , pathology , business , machine learning
Background In order to meet national Australian nursing registration requisites, nurses need to meet competency requirements for evidence‐based practices (EBPs). Aims A hypothetical model was formulated to explore factors that influenced Australian nursing students’ ability and achievement to understand and employ EBPs related to health care provision. Methods A nonexperimental, descriptive survey method was used to identify self‐reported EBP efficacy estimates of 375 completing undergraduate nursing students. Factors influencing participants’ self‐rated EBP abilities were validated by Rasch analysis and then modeled using the partial least squares analysis (PLS Path) program. Results Graduating nursing students’ ability to understand and apply EBPs for clinical improvement can be directly and indirectly predicted by eight variables including their understanding in the analysis, critique and synthesis of clinically based nursing research, their ability to communicate research to others and whether they had actually witnessed other staff delivering EBP. Linking Evidence to Action Forty‐one percent of the variance in the nursing students’ self‐rated EBP efficacy scores is able to be accounted for by this model. Previous exposure to EBP studies facilitates participants’ confidence with EBP, particularly with concurrent clinical EBP experiences.

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