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Challenges of collecting data in the clinical settingCentre for Nursing Studies, National University of Ireland, Galway Undertaking a piece of research in the clinical setting is often far more difficult than it appears from descriptions in textbooks. This paper describes some of the challenges faced in the course of completing a non-participant observational study that examined how health promotion practice was carried out by hospital-based nurses in an acute setting. The challenges included deciding which observational role to adopt, whether to use structured or unstructured observations, which observational position to adopt, how long observation sessions should be and how to deal with ethical issues when the researcher is also a nurse. It is concluded that the answers to some dilemmas and challenges are not always found in the literature and that decisions taken often depend on the researcher's morality and pure common sense.
Key Words: Observational data Ethics Sampling Health promotion
Nursing Times Research, Vol. 9, No. 2,
131-141 (2004) |
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