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Language of Research
Since Florence Nightingale, nurse researchers have influenced patient
care by systematically observing patients to learn their needs, their
reactions to treatments/procedures, and their ability to adhere to medical
regimens (Downs, 1991). When a problem is identified, nurse researchers
develop and test interventions, such as preoperative teaching, or treatments
to improve health outcomes. The modern quantitative nurse researcher needs
to incorporate an interdisciplinary viewpoint, and include other disciplines
as part of the research process. Having an interdisciplinary focus
necessitates reaching a common understanding of research basics and the
language or terminology used in our literature.
As you know, research is similar to learning a new language and there
will be new words to learn in order to understand what you are reading. For
example, in the articles, the authors may refer to “investigators,”
“subjects,” and “informed consent.” This chapter will define these words to
assist you in reading research articles. For example, statistical inference
is a phrase used to describe the interpretation of data that has been tested
through statistical analysis. Researchers are able to “infer or explain”
when the findings are statistically significant (results that do not occur
by chance).
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