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The nature of evidence to inform critical care nursing practice

This thesis presents a body of publications, in the area of critical care nursing, for consideration for the award of Doctor of Philosophy by Publication. The thesis is presented in three chapters: Introduction; Body of Work; and Research, Knowledge, Evidence and Practice. In the first chapter the emergence of evidence-based practice is described, in general. Initially, an overview of the origins and trends of nursing research methodology is provided; the purpose of which is to set in context the body of work. Utilising a narrative approach (Boje, 2001; McCance et aL, 2001; Sandelowski, 199 1; Vezeau, 1994) as a 'personal journal of discovery' I then reflexively describe my own development as a nurse researcher practitioner, drawing on my own publications to illustrate my progress, the development of my thinking, my research practice and the development of my understanding of pragmatice pistemology. The second chapter is comprised of my publications relevant to critical care nursing. Spanning a period of eleven years, they represent my contribution to critical care nursing knowledge. In the concluding chapter I have summarised initially my own contribution to critical care nursing knowledge, before moving on to a more detailed critique of evidence-based practice. Finally I have made recommendations for the way forward. In addition to presenting my body of work, the aim of this PhD is to challenget he current concept of evidence-based practice, arguing that its definition is too narrow to encompass the rage of different types of knowledge that nurses use when caring for critically ill patients. I have utilised my own publications, to demonstrate how a variety of approaches are necessary to provide the best evidence for developing practice. I have positioned my argument within a theoretical understanding of pragmatic epistemology. In this way, I am working towards the development of a science of practice. Simultaneously I am also, to some extent, challenging conventional concepts of what constitutes doctoral level knowledge and how a PhD looks. My conclusion is that critical care nursing knowledge is drawn from many sources, and should be applied in an integrated way that enables practitioners to make a positive difference to the life of patients.Knowledge that is not or cannot be applied to practice is therefore of no value. The valuing of practice knowledge brings with it the requirement that all forms of knowledge (and their relevant methodologies) are considered as equal,in terms of their potential to impact on practice and that nothing should be rejected on paradigmatic grounds. In contemporary healthcare evidence is hierarchically valued and this raises many questions of equity. Where the value of knowledge becomes unequal is when its application to practice is limited. The corollary of a pragmatice pistemology is that it requires a pragmatic process to make it work. For me, at this point in time, the best available is practice development. In summary,this thesis represents a construction of work that makes an original contribution to knowledge. The product of my thesis is a theory of pragmatic epistemology as the basis for a science of practice.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:403488
Date January 2003
CreatorsFulbrook, P.
PublisherBournemouth University
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/295/

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