editedbook
HISTORY AND BARRIERS OF EVIDENCED BASED PRACTICE
Area/Stream: Pharmacy & Nursing,
Authors: Kalpana Shee,
Keywords: Barriers, evedience
Book Name /series: Futuristic Trends in Pharmacy & Nursing, Volume 2, Book 24, Chapter 3
Publication: IIP Proceedings
Year: 2022,
Month: November
Page No: 26-32,
ISSN/ISBN: 978-93-95632-82-9,
DOI/Link: https://rsquarel.org/assets/docupload/rsl20230D1F5295409D3AE.pdf
Abstract:
There have been times in the past when practise was based on ill-defined bodies of knowledge in many different fields of professional practise, including medicine, nursing, psychology, psychiatry, and other fields. Some of the information was merely folklore based on the observations of previous generations of experts, and a lot of it was supported by little to no real scientific data. Additionally, nursing practises are frequently dependent on the historical experiences of the nurses; nevertheless, there is little scientific support for the clinical decisions and expected results of nurses. Through nursing practises supported by research findings, the client objective is accomplished and the legitimacy of nursing practises is strengthened. Therefore, nurses must base their practises on scientific research in order to enhance client outcomes, provide safe, economical procedures, and improve the public's view of nursing care. The principles of evidence-based nursing (EBN) can be found in Florence Nightingale's nursing techniques. Her approach was based on the three pillars of promoting health, preventing illness, and treating the sick. Finding trustworthy research results and applying them into nursing practises is required to enhance patient care. The terms using research and evidence-based practise (EBP) are occasionally used synonymously. However, in practise, the term "research utilisation" only refers to the application of empirically acquired knowledge in nursing practises. The use of research, or to put it simply, the use of research findings in any or all aspects of one's professional life as a registered nurse, has also been referred to as research utilisation. The quantity of scientific information that is currently available to back up the clinical judgments of health professionals has increased recently. Even though this data is readily available, many healthcare systems in the United States and around the world still do not include evidence-based care as a regular practise because American physicians lack EBP competency and cultural practises are still very firmly established in tradition. Scientific discoveries are still painfully slow to translate into therapeutic practise, usually taking years or even decades.
Cite this: Kalpana Shee,,"HISTORY AND BARRIERS OF EVIDENCED BASED PRACTICE", Futuristic Trends in Pharmacy & Nursing, Volume 2, Book 24, Chapter 3, November, 2022, 26-32, 978-93-95632-82-9, https://rsquarel.org/assets/docupload/rsl20230D1F5295409D3AE.pdf