Reading Nursing Research to Critique a Study and to
Summarize Findings for Use in Practice
Research must be used to develop the discipline and science of nursing.
Learning how to critically read nursing research then is crucial in its
application to practice. First, a review of some of the common research
language and definitions of the sections seen in quantitative research
articles are covered. As you go through the chapter, you will learn how to
critically read each section of the research article. You are given many
examples to help you get the most information from comparing what you have
read to colleagues’ reviews of articles on the same topic. You will learn
some questions to pose about the quality of the research as well as the
appropriateness of using the findings in your own practice.
Nurses must learn how to read, understand, and critique research articles
(Zanotti, 2000). Reading about nursing research should get you in the habit
of posing questions about the quality of the research and about the
appropriateness of using the research results in your own practice (Snyder-Halpern,
1991). As you go through this assignment, you will learn how to critically
read each section of the research article. You are given many examples to
help you get the most information from comparing what you have read to
colleagues’ reviews of articles on the same topic. When using research
findings in practice, it is best to find replication of results in several
studies before using the research in your practice (Linquist, Brauer,
Lekander, & Foster, 1990). After reading and summarizing the research
literature, on a topic the nurse then develops a detailed plan for
utilization of selected research findings in her practice. This plan
included specific actions for communication of the research findings to
other nurses and physicians, and a method of evaluation to be used after the
research was put into practice. Thus, the examples given here are from
reading several articles on the same research topic.
Reading Research Articles
This overview is an example illustrating how to read research articles.
First, ascertain the problem being examined by reading the title and
abstract to get a summary of the study. The introductory paragraphs of the
article must clearly state the significance of the problem described in
previous studies on this topic in the literature. Then, determine if the
research design and methods used are appropriate for the problem under
study. Next, the reader reads the data collection procedures described in
the design and the data that were analyzed. The reader determines if
appropriate statistical tests have been applied to the data collected in the
particular study. There are typically graphs and tables that are visual
interpretations of the data. These visuals should give you an understanding
of measures of central tendency, such as the mean and standard deviation,
and data distribution. The normal curve and measures of central tendency are
essential to display. The process of inferring from a sample to a clinical
situation in terms of conclusions should be discussed. Review the authors’
discussion comments and rate them as acceptable and important for clinical
practice and as contributing to the subject matter. You must, however, read
all of the sections and determine if the authors’ implications for practice
are correct from the data they obtained. Examples in the Tables will help
you critique the sections of the article.
Questions to Use When Reviewing Research Articles
To guide your critique of a research article, use the following questions
when reading each section of a quantitative study. Reading an article while
thinking about these questions, which are related to quality of the study,
is important for determining if you should put the research into practice.
Use the list of questions in Table 1 to help you understand the process of
reading each section of the research article.
These examples are the author’s summary from reading five
interdisciplinary, quantitative research articles on the same topic of
congestive heart failure (CHF). The overall research objectives of these
studies were to determine what factors relate to older persons with
congestive heart failure (CHF) having to be readmitted to the hospital (Heidenreich,
Ruggerio, & Massie, 1999; Rich, Beckham, Wittenberg, & Freedland, 1995;
Shah, Der, Ruggerio, Heidenreich, & Massie, 1998; Smith, 1991).
Title and Abstract of the Article
Does the title indicate the research is important for nursing?
Does the abstract include information from each section of the article?
For example, all five studies had clear title and abstract statements.
Information on the problem, theory and literature synthesis, research design
and statistical analyses; and major findings are listed. However, the
research questions or hypothesis were missing from 3 of the abstracts.
Another common issue in reading abstracts is to distinguish the specific
problem identified for the research, and how the actual data that is
collected represents or matches the problem.
Statement of the Problem
Is the problem identified early and stated clearly and concisely?
Is the problem stated in terms, which are specific and narrow enough to
study?
Is the problem important or significant for nursing practice?
For example, the descriptive studies provided evidence that re-admissions
to hospitals of patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) were very
frequent and thus, a very costly problem. The experimental studies state the
problem as a need for teaching or follow-up home care by nursing, which can
reduce readmission costs. Unfortunately, a limitation of the studies was
that no cost data were collected.
Review of Literature and Theoretical or Conceptual Framework
Is the study problem described within the context of existing knowledge
and previous research on the topic and has interdisciplinary literature been
investigated?
Does the review of the literature provide supporting evidence to show the
need for carrying out the research?
Is consultation with experts in the field apparent?
Are documentation and selection of references appropriate?
For example, the literature review for these studies all referenced
recent interdisciplinary studies done on patient teaching for CHF. Explain
how the literature review or theory was applied to this study. For example,
3 of the 5 studies used the cost effectiveness theory and one used adult
learning theory. These theories were used to guide selection of
questionnaires and outcome data. Theories were used to limit the research
population to CHF patients who had repeated Emergency Room visits and
re-hospitalizations. There should be discussion of a conceptual framework or
theory appropriate to use for guiding the study. Two of the five studies had
no theory or conceptual framework, and therefore were not specific in the
questionnaires used or data gathered. Results from that study were too broad
to be helpful for nursing practice. Unfortunately, a limitation was that
only one of the authors had gerontology as a specialty area. Thus, the other
research may not have the benefit of interventions tested, which were
developed with older adults in mind.
Research Design
Is the design appropriate to answer the questions indicated by the
problem?
Are correct statistics used to test the study hypotheses?
Were the measures of central tendency and descriptive/summary statistics
before further analysis of data?
What do the terms clinical significance versus statistical significance
mean?
How many survey responses do you need to demonstrate feasibility, and
what is this measure of feasibility (e.g., if 50% of respondents say the
message is interesting, is that enough, or do you need 80%?
What happens if the researchers don’t get enough responses?
For example, of the 5 studies reviewed, 3 were descriptive research
design, and 2 were correlation research design. For example, the descriptive
studies were explanatory; therefore, the age, education level, and severity
of disease could be described along with the number of ER visits and returns
to the hospital. The correlational designs were used to look for
associations; therefore, the number of ER visits of CHF patients following
hospital discharge could be compared to the number of nurse follow-up
telephone calls and videotapes on home CHF care given to the family.
A portion of the research design review should explain how the research
variables and the hypothesized relationships were selected (e.g., severity
of illness of the patients in relation to the teaching methodology needed at
discharge by the family). There should be links between variables in the
conceptual framework and those measured in the data collection.
Note any probable sources of error that might influence the results; for
example, the ordinal data was not the correct type to collect for the tests
used in the correlational studies. There were strengths and weaknesses in
the statistics that were used; for example, all studies had been conducted
in hospitals with elderly patients being treated for CHF; none were
conducted in patients’ homes where the researchers could observe day-by-day
barriers to home CHF management.
As the joke below illustrates, when using statistics, assumptions about
the appropriate statistic to analyze the data, cannot depend on miracles!
Results or Findings
Are the findings of this study relevant to your clinical practice?
Is there enough evidence base (data) to indicate this patient’s problem
can be minimized by using the nursing interventions tested in the study?
For example, to determine the extent to which these findings currently
are being used in practice. You can interview faculty and nurse graduates
and examine relevant textbooks. Both experimental studies had evidence that
indicated nurses telephoning or providing videotape patient education
guidance decreased ER visits compared to control group patient samples.
The implications for nursing across all studies were that our profession
needed to think in terms of populations of patients and what specific
nursing interventions can contribute to improved outcomes including lower
costs by decreasing hospital use. Then, you must decide on the application
of the results to your own clinical practice (Kirchhoff, & Titler, 1994).
Journal Clubs for Research Reading
You may read research for clinical implications in journal clubs or
workgroups of students, nurses, doctors, and even patients. You might
facilitate a discussion around aspects of research on families managing
complex home care, the research topic called caregiving. There are a vast
number of quantitative articles on this topic (Dracup, & Breu, 1978). Thus,
one of the first discussion questions of your group might be, "What are
problems that family caregivers face when they are managing critically ill
children, frail elders, or their terminal ill loved ones in their home?"
Another discussion question might be, "What are the likely research designs
to be used in describing these types of caregiving problems, or are there
nursing interventions for caregivers that have been tested in experimental
research?" Your group would decide what the benefit of either type of
article would be for the groups reading once the various articles were read
(one article by each person). Next, each person shares the review of their
article.
A further question for discussion would be: "Did the research article
operationally define a family caregiver" or “what problem statement
identified the variables to study?” “Did the researchers determine what
caregivers face when working with medical equipment needed in the home?" By
the end of these workgroups research discussions, you will have a good
overview of the research in the problem area you selected to read. You will
also be able to learn from the opinions of the others in the group as well.
This table has an example workgroup where each person shared their critique
of a separate article on the topic of interest to nurse administrators.
Reading Research Articles for Using Research In Practice
Next, your critique should discuss "research utilization," a word used to
describe the process of reading research critically to determine if there is
enough scientific results of nursing research to put into practice (Butts,
1982; Fawcett, 1982; Sheridan, 1983; and Stetler, 1983, 1984). Research
Utilization is "a process directed toward transfer of specific
research-based knowledge into practice through the systematic use of a
series of activities" (Dunn, 1983; Krueger, 1978). Activities for using
research include: transformation of implications for practice from the
research articles into what is known as a data based or evidence based
clinical care plan (Horsley, Crane, Crabtree, & Wood 1983). Each care plan
focuses on a researched problem and related nursing actions; and each uses
the actual studies read to develop step-by-step instructions on how to
introduce the new research based plan on a clinical unit (Barnard, 2000;
King, Barnard, & Hoehn, 1981).
In other words, research can provide material for a new procedure or
policy to support the need for change of services. In contrast, a nurse can
use new research to improve her understanding of various situations (Stetler,
& Marram, 1976; Stetler, 1983). The classic example is nurses implementing a
structured preoperative teaching program that became standards that improved
all surgical care (a 1971 study by Lindeman and Van Aernam). The discussion
group readers can adapt the findings of the caregiving studies to develop a
care plan that they tested now being used for including family. Remember to
keep reading, asking critical questions, and using appropriate quantitative
research in your nursing practice. Then, you will truly have defined nursing
practice as “merging science with compassion.” |