Aim. This paper discusses a process for research utilization that overcomes well known barriers in order to influence clinical decision-making and practice change. Read, Think, Do! is a problem-solving approach to research utilization and practice development which has the potential to overcome barriers to research utilization. Background. Any process for research utilization at the practice level needs to overcome numerous barriers in order to influence clinical decision-making and practice change. Access to research-based knowledge is an obvious first step in the evidence-based approach to care delivery, but is clearly inadequate alone in influencing the improvement of practice. Discussion. Read, Think, Do! acknowledges the complexity of ...
Aim. The paper reports a study to develop and test a tool for assessing a range of factors influenci...
Whilst EBP is generally accepted as something to aspire to, in reality changes to practices are not ...
There continue to be suggestions within the nursing literature that research findings are not being ...
Aim. This paper discusses a process for research utilization that overcomes well-known barriers in o...
Aims: To determine the extent to which clinical nursing practice has adopted research evidence. To i...
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To describe the importance of, and methods for, successfully conducting and tra...
Nurses are not averse to applying research findings to their clinical practice; however, there appea...
This paper follows a previous paper (Hewitt-Taylor et al, 2012) in which the authors summarised thei...
As is often reported in the literature exploring the research-practice gap, applying the principles ...
This paper challenges the hegemony (the mindset prevailing within education and health-care environm...
© 2016 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Nursing Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Aims and objecti...
Aims and objectives: To describe the process of implementing evidence-based practice (EBP) in a cli...
Aim: This paper reports a study examining the barriers associated with research knowledge transfer a...
In recent years calls for evidence-based practice are being made emphatically in the nursing literat...
Within the evidence-based movement means are developed to support the practitioner in becoming a res...
Aim. The paper reports a study to develop and test a tool for assessing a range of factors influenci...
Whilst EBP is generally accepted as something to aspire to, in reality changes to practices are not ...
There continue to be suggestions within the nursing literature that research findings are not being ...
Aim. This paper discusses a process for research utilization that overcomes well-known barriers in o...
Aims: To determine the extent to which clinical nursing practice has adopted research evidence. To i...
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To describe the importance of, and methods for, successfully conducting and tra...
Nurses are not averse to applying research findings to their clinical practice; however, there appea...
This paper follows a previous paper (Hewitt-Taylor et al, 2012) in which the authors summarised thei...
As is often reported in the literature exploring the research-practice gap, applying the principles ...
This paper challenges the hegemony (the mindset prevailing within education and health-care environm...
© 2016 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Nursing Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Aims and objecti...
Aims and objectives: To describe the process of implementing evidence-based practice (EBP) in a cli...
Aim: This paper reports a study examining the barriers associated with research knowledge transfer a...
In recent years calls for evidence-based practice are being made emphatically in the nursing literat...
Within the evidence-based movement means are developed to support the practitioner in becoming a res...
Aim. The paper reports a study to develop and test a tool for assessing a range of factors influenci...
Whilst EBP is generally accepted as something to aspire to, in reality changes to practices are not ...
There continue to be suggestions within the nursing literature that research findings are not being ...