EBP 205 TEST BANK INTRO TO NURSING RESEARCH AND EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE 2024 UPDATE.
Ch 01: Intro to Nursing Research and Evidence-Based Practice
1.
... [Show More] Which best describes evidence-based-practice (EBP)?
a. A combination of best research evidence, clinical expertise, and the needs and values of
patients.
b. A determination of the factors necessary to control patient responses to care.
c. The development of population care guidelines applicable to all patients.
d. The utilization of quantitative and qualitative studies to enhance patient outcomes.
ANS: A
A Evidence-based practice evolves from the integration of the best research evidence with clinical
expertise and patient needs and values.
B Studies that attempt to find determinants of patient outcomes are generally experimental or
quasi-experimental. They may be used to guide EBP but do not completely define it.
C EBP is a combination of guidelines and specific patient needs and values.
D Quantitative and qualitative studies applied to the evaluation of patient outcomes are part of
EBP but do not completely define EBP.
2. The nurse is collecting data about the sleep patterns of breastfed babies as part of a larger research
study. Which research method will the nurse use when collecting data for this study?
a. Control
b. Description
c. Explanation
d. Prediction
ANS: B
A Control can be described as the ability to write a prescription to produce the desired outcome.
B Description involves identifying and understanding the nature of nursing phenomena and the
relationships among these phenomena.
C Explanation clarifies the relationships among phenomena and identifies why certain events
occur.
D Through prediction, the probability of a specific outcome can be estimated in a given situation.
3. The nurse is participating in a study and is collecting data identifying the number of obese adults
whose parents were also obese or overweight. Which research method is being used in this study?
a. Control
b. Description
c. Explanation
d. Prediction
ANS: D
A Control indicates the ability to use a prescribed intervention to produce a desired outcome.
B Description involves identifying and understanding the nature of nursing phenomena and the
relationships among these phenomena.
C Explanation clarifies the relationships among phenomena and identifies why certain events
occur.
D Through prediction the probability of a specific outcome can be estimated in a given situation.
By knowing the percentage of parents of obese adults who were obese, the probability of predicting this
may be calculated.
4. The nurse reviews a study in which adherence to an asthma action plan is compared among groups of
adolescents who received different asthma education. Which research method does this represent?
a. Control
b. Description
c. Explanation
d. Prediction
ANS: C
A Control indicates the ability to use a prescribed intervention to produce a desired outcome.
B Description involves identifying and understanding the nature of nursing phenomena and the
relationships among these phenomena.
C Explanation clarifies the relationships among phenomena and identifies why certain events
occur.
D Through prediction, the probability of a specific outcome can be estimated in a given situation.
5. A nurse manager is interested in learning which attitudes among staff nurses may indicate relative risk
of needle-stick injuries. To study this, the nurse manager will employ which method of study?
a. Control
b. Description
c. Explanation
d. Prediction
ANS:D
A Control indicates the ability to use a prescribed intervention to produce a desired outcome.
B Explanation clarifies the relationships among phenomena and identifies why certain events
occur.
C Description involves identifying and understanding the nature of nursing phenomena and the
relationships among these phenomena.
D Through prediction, the probability of a specific outcome can be estimated in a given situation.
6. Which is the most important result of Florence Nightingale’s data collection and statistical analysis
during the Crimean War?
a. Bringing awareness of the rigors of war to the general public.
b. Developing a process for statistical analysis and nursing documentation.
c. Identifying and defining the role of nurses in modern health care.
d. Using clinical research to evaluate the importance of sanitation, clean drinking water, and
adequate nutrition.
ANS: D
C This was not the most important result
D Nightingale’s research enabled her to instigate attitudinal, organizational, and social changes,
including the military’s approach to the care of the sick and society’s sense of responsibility for testing
public water, improving sanitation, and preventing starvation to decrease morbidity and mortality rates.
7. The nurse participates in data collection in a study in which two different pain management protocols
are used with randomly assigned patients to measure differences in postoperative recovery time. Which
method of study is this?
a. Control
b. Correlation
c. Description
d. Explanation
ANS: A
A Control indicates the ability to use a prescribed intervention to produce a desired outcome.
B Correlation examines the relationships between different phenomena.
C Description involves identifying and understanding the nature of nursing phenomena and the
relationships among these phenomena.
D Explanation clarifies the relationships among phenomena and identifies why certain events
occur.
8. The development of nursing theories and conceptual models in the late 1960s and 1970s served to:
a. determine the effectiveness of nursing interventions.
b. establish the concept of evidence-based practice.
c. provide funding for nursing research.
d. provide direction for nursing research.
ANS: D
A Outcome studies are used to determine the effectiveness of nursing interventions.
B The concept of EBP was developed in the 1970s and promoted by the ANCC Magnet Designation
program.
C The NINR seeks to provide funding for nursing research.
D The theories developed in the 1960s and 1970s helped to direct future nursing research.
9. Under Ada Sue Hinshaw, the National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR) began to change its focus
to:
a. funding nursing rather than medical research.
b. evaluating outcomes rather than process studies.
c. increasing the status and funding for nursing research.
d. supporting the dissemination of nursing research.
ANS: C
A The change in focus from medical to nursing research came about with the first nursing
programs. Specialty nursing organizations today and some nursing researchers still conduct medical
research for specific studies.
B Outcomes research emerged in the 1980s and 1990s to document the effectiveness of health
care services.
C Under Ada Sue Hinshaw, the national Center for Nursing Research (NCNR) changed its name to
the NINR to increase the status and funding of nursing research.
D The NCNR’s purpose was to support the dissemination of nursing research.
10. An emphasis of the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) Magnet Hospital Designation
Program for Excellence in Nursing is:
a. research and development of clinical practice guidelines.
b. putting qualitative research into practice in clinical settings.
c. using standard nursing care plans based on outcomes research.
d. utilizing evidence-based practice in nursing.
ANS: D
A Clinical practice guidelines are a more recent phenomenon, using evidence-based research,
expert opinion, and patient needs and values to standardize care.
B Qualitative research was introduced in the late 1970s to gain insight into the phenomena related
to nursing.
C Outcomes research was important in the 1980s to 1990s to document the effectiveness of
health care services.
D ANCC implemented the Magnet Hospital Designation Program for Excellence in Nursing Service
in 1990 that emphasized EBP for nursing.
11. In a position statement in 2006, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) identified a
need to:
a. acquire clinical knowledge and expertise.
b. focus on evidence-based practice.
c. fund academic nursing research.
d. prepare a workforce of nurse scientists.
ANS: D
A Basic nursing education focuses on clinical knowledge and expertise.
B Evidence-based practice is a focus of ANCC and the Magnet Designation Program for Excellence
in Nursing Service.
C The NINR focuses on funding for nursing research.
D The AACN identified the importance of creating a research culture, providing high-quality
educational programs to prepare a workforce of nurse scientists, develop a sound research structure,
and obtain funding for nursing research.
12. The lead agency designated to improve health care quality is:
a. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
b. American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC).
c. Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN).
d. National Institute for Nursing Research (NINR).
ANS: A
A AHRQ is a scientific partner with the public and private sectors to improve the quality and safety
of patient care.
B ANCC provides credentialing for advanced practice nurses and for Magnet Designation for
Excellence in Nursing Service
C QSEN is focused on developing the requisite skills, knowledge, and attitude statements for the
competencies for prelicensure and graduate education.
D The National Institute of Nursing Research, originally the National Center for Nursing Research, is
a federally funded arm of the National Institutes of Health, providing nursing with federal support for
nursing research priorities.
13. To help fulfill the mission of the National Institute for Nursing Research—to promote and improve
the health of individuals, families, communities, and populations—a study may be conducted which:
a. assesses the effectiveness of strategies for weight management in patients with type 2 diabetes.
b. compares the attitudes of nurses toward clients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
c. generates up-to-date nursing diagnoses reflecting the needs of clients with type 2 diabetes.
d. reviews hospital nurses’ adherence to glucose-monitoring guidelines for patients with type 2
diabetes.
ANS: A
A A study that assesses the effectiveness of interventions helps to improve the health of patient
populations by identifying appropriate strategies.
B A comparison of attitudes is a descriptive study that does not improve outcomes.
C A study to generate nursing diagnoses does not directly affect patient outcomes.
D A study reviewing adherence to guidelines seeks to provide data for quality assurance.
14. Which best describes the Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) competency for evidencebased practice (EBP)?
a. Adhering to published guidelines to provide care for a specific population.
b. Empowering clients to choose among effective disease management strategies.
c. Relying on expert knowledge to guide care plan development for an individual patient.
d. Using evidence gained solely from experimental studies to guide care.
ANS: B
A Strict adherence to guidelines does not take the patient/family preferences into account.
B The QSEN competency for EBP is defined as integrating the best evidence with clinical expertise
and patient/family preferences.
C EBP does not rely solely on expert knowledge or experimental studies.
D Although experimental studies provide the highest level of study data, EBP does not rely soley
on experiemental studies..
15. Through knowledge gained from her phenomenological qualitative study identifying levels of
experience of professional nurses, Patricia Benner would identify which nurse as an expert?
a. A hospice nurse who values the unique wishes of each patient when providing palliative care.
b. A medical-surgical nurse who organizes care for a group of patients to ensure timely
administration of medications.
c. A neonatal intensive care nurse who is skilled in inserting peripherally inserted central catheters.
d. A pediatric nurse who notes subtle changes and intervenes to prevent respiratory failure.
ANS: D
A The proficient nurse views the patient as a whole and recognizes that each patient responds
differently to illness and health.
B The competent nurse is able to achieve goals and plans and to take conscious actions to organize
and provide efficient care.
C The NIC nurse is also an example of a competent nurse who is skilled in a procedure.
D The expert nurse has an extensive background of experience and is able to identify and
accurately intervene skillfully in a situation. The pediatric nurse in this case recognizes subtle changes
and is able to act to prevent serious circumstances. [Show Less]