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Perioperative nurses’ knowledge, practice, attitude, and perceived barriers to evidence use: A multisite, cross-sectional survey

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 05:53 authored by Jed Duff, Butler, M, Davies, M, Williams, R, Carlile, J
Despite the wide acceptance of evidence-based practice as the foundation for professional health care delivery, there still remains a considerable gap between research evidence and current perioperative nursing practice. The aim of this study was to describe the self-reported knowledge, practice, attitudes and perceived barriers to evidence-based practice among perioperative nurses from nine metropolitan hospitals. Eight hundred nurses were sent a survey comprising two validated tools, the Barriers to Research Utilisation Scale (BARRIERS Scale) and the Evidence-Based Practice Questionnaire (EBPQ). Four hundred and ninety-three participants completed the returned the survey (60%). On the seven-point EBPQ, participants rated their evidence-based practice knowledge as 4.65 (1=poor to 7=excellent); their use of evidence-based practice as 4.12 (1=never to 7=frequently); and their attitude to evidence-based practice as 5.23 (1=negative to 7=positive). On the BARRIERS Scale (1=no barrier to 4=great barrier) issues related to the organisation were identified as the most significant barrier (2.66); followed by research communication issues (2.76); individual adopter-related issues (2.65); and issues about the innovation (2.52). These results indicate that this sample of Australian perioperative nurses have a positive attitude to evidence-based practice and reasonable knowledge of the topic; but this has not resulted in extensive use of evidence in the clinical setting.

History

Publication title

ACORN: The Journal of Perioperative Nursing in Australia

Volume

27

Issue

4

Pagination

28-35

ISSN

1448-7535

Department/School

School of Nursing

Publisher

Cambridge Publishing

Place of publication

Australia

Rights statement

Copyright 2014 ACORN Journal

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Clinical health not elsewhere classified

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