Exploring sources of knowledge utilized in practice among Jordanian registered nurses. Al-Ghabeesh, S., H., Abu-Moghli, F., Salsali, M., & Saleh, M. Journal of evaluation in clinical practice, 19(5):889-894, John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 10, 2013.
abstract   bibtex   
Rationale, aims and objectives Understanding sources of knowledge used in everyday practice is very helpful in improving the quality of health care services. There is a consensus in the literature that nurses mostly relied in their practice on experiential knowledge gained through their interactions with other members of health care professionals and patients. The general aim of this study is to explore the sources of knowledge Jordanian registered nurses use during their practice. Method A descriptive correlational design was used to collect data from 539 Jordanian registered nurses from 10 hospitals using a self-administered questionnaire. Results The mean year of experience of the sample was 7.08 years. Of the 615 questionnaires distributed, 555 were returned. This yields a response rate of 87.6%. Results revealed that the top five ranked sources used by Jordanian registered nurses include: the information that nurses learned during nursing education, personal experience in nursing over time, what was learned through providing care to patients, information gained through discussion between physicians and nurses about patients, and information from policy and procedure manuals. Conclusion Jordanian registered nurses recognize the value of research and that research utilization (RU) is an important issue and must not be ignored. The study has many implications for practice, education and research. Health care managers and decision makers need to play a more visible and instrumental role in encouraging RU to improve patients' quality of life.
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 title = {Exploring sources of knowledge utilized in practice among Jordanian registered nurses},
 type = {article},
 year = {2013},
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 keywords = {Jordanian registered nurses,contextual data,demographic data,sources of knowledge},
 pages = {889-894},
 volume = {19},
 month = {10},
 publisher = {John Wiley & Sons Ltd},
 city = {Assistant Professor Associate Professor, Faculty of Nursing, University of Jordan, Amman, Jordan Professor, Faculty of Nursing, Alberta University, Alberta, Canada.},
 id = {66fc7fdc-b21b-34ff-84c9-d470945cf0c3},
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 notes = {ID: 67408; CI: (c) 2012; JID: 9609066; OTO: NOTNLM; 2012/05/29 [aheadofprint]; ppublish},
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 abstract = {Rationale, aims and objectives Understanding sources of knowledge used in everyday practice is very helpful in improving the quality of health care services. There is a consensus in the literature that nurses mostly relied in their practice on experiential knowledge gained through their interactions with other members of health care professionals and patients. The general aim of this study is to explore the sources of knowledge Jordanian registered nurses use during their practice. Method A descriptive correlational design was used to collect data from 539 Jordanian registered nurses from 10 hospitals using a self-administered questionnaire. Results The mean year of experience of the sample was 7.08 years. Of the 615 questionnaires distributed, 555 were returned. This yields a response rate of 87.6%. Results revealed that the top five ranked sources used by Jordanian registered nurses include: the information that nurses learned during nursing education, personal experience in nursing over time, what was learned through providing care to patients, information gained through discussion between physicians and nurses about patients, and information from policy and procedure manuals. Conclusion Jordanian registered nurses recognize the value of research and that research utilization (RU) is an important issue and must not be ignored. The study has many implications for practice, education and research. Health care managers and decision makers need to play a more visible and instrumental role in encouraging RU to improve patients' quality of life.},
 bibtype = {article},
 author = {Al-Ghabeesh, S H and Abu-Moghli, F and Salsali, M and Saleh, M},
 journal = {Journal of evaluation in clinical practice},
 number = {5}
}

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