Research utilisation in clinical practice: the experience of nurses and midwives working in public hospitals

Abstract Background Nurses and midwives play a vital role to utilise research in clinical decision-making practice. However, limited support for research utilisation and barriers of research utilisation hamper to utilise up-to-date research findings in clinical practice. Therefore, this study aimed...

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Main Authors: Asrat Hailu Dagne, H. /Mariam Demewozu Tebeje
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-03-01
Series:Reproductive Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-021-01095-x
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spelling doaj-bd6c2e0371ee457d9850699d7f5518b02021-03-21T12:19:32ZengBMCReproductive Health1742-47552021-03-011811910.1186/s12978-021-01095-xResearch utilisation in clinical practice: the experience of nurses and midwives working in public hospitalsAsrat Hailu Dagne0H. /Mariam Demewozu Tebeje1Department of Midwifery, Debre Tabor UniversitySchool of midwifery, University of GondarAbstract Background Nurses and midwives play a vital role to utilise research in clinical decision-making practice. However, limited support for research utilisation and barriers of research utilisation hamper to utilise up-to-date research findings in clinical practice. Therefore, this study aimed to explore nurses’ and midwives’ experience of research utilisation in public hospitals. Methods A qualitative descriptive approach was conducted to explore nurses’ and midwives’ experience of research utilisation in clinical practice within South Gondar Zone public hospitals from January 3 to June 28, 2020. A total of 20 interviewees, 40 participants of FGDs, and 8 observations were considered in the study. Data from the interview, FGD, and observation were imported into NVivo 12 plus to manage and analyze the data using the Computer-Assisted Data Analysis Software Program (CAQDAS). The data were analyzed through thematic content analysis. Results Nurses’ and midwives’ experience of using research findings in clinical decision-making emerged as “the non-intentional research utilisation” the main theme. Data analysis produced as “the belief towards research utilisation”, “the limited support for nurses and midwives”, and, “the perceived barriers of research utilisation” as the three themes. Participants believed that the non-use of the primary research was recommended due to fear of accountability for client harm. The limited support for nurses’ and midwives’ experience of research utilisation decrease nurses’ and midwives’ confidence to utilise research in clinical practice. Knowledge, attitude, time mismanagement, and the lack of motivation were perceived barriers to research utilisation. The lack of training and access to systematic review and meta-analysis research findings limited the research utilisation in clinical practice. Conclusions The experience of research utilisation indicated that there was limited support for nurses and midwives to utilise research. Nurses and midwives did not utilise research in their clinical practice intentionally. This study identified that knowledge, negative attitude towards research utilisation, lack of training; time mismanagement, and lack of motivation were the perceived barriers to research utilisation. Therefore, the promotion of adopting the research utilisation and training on the identified barriers are mandatory. Plain English summary Nurses and midwives play a vital role to utilise research in clinical decision-making practice. However, the limited support for research utilisation and barriers of research utilisation hamper the utilisation of up-to-date research in clinical practice. Therefore, this study aimed to explore nurses’ and midwives’ experience of using the knowledge obtained from research findings in clinical and healthcare decision-making practice within public hospitals. The experience of research utilisation among nurses and midwives working in public hospitals was studied. There was limited support for nurses’ and midwives’ experience of research utilisation. Nurses and midwives did not utilise research in their clinical practice intentionally. The knowledge, negative attitude towards research utilisation, lack of training, time mismanagement, and lack of motivation were the perceived barriers to research utilisation. Therefore, the promotion of adopting the research utilisation and training on the identified barriers are mandatory.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-021-01095-xResearch utilisationBarriersSupporting factors of research utilisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Asrat Hailu Dagne
H. /Mariam Demewozu Tebeje
spellingShingle Asrat Hailu Dagne
H. /Mariam Demewozu Tebeje
Research utilisation in clinical practice: the experience of nurses and midwives working in public hospitals
Reproductive Health
Research utilisation
Barriers
Supporting factors of research utilisation
author_facet Asrat Hailu Dagne
H. /Mariam Demewozu Tebeje
author_sort Asrat Hailu Dagne
title Research utilisation in clinical practice: the experience of nurses and midwives working in public hospitals
title_short Research utilisation in clinical practice: the experience of nurses and midwives working in public hospitals
title_full Research utilisation in clinical practice: the experience of nurses and midwives working in public hospitals
title_fullStr Research utilisation in clinical practice: the experience of nurses and midwives working in public hospitals
title_full_unstemmed Research utilisation in clinical practice: the experience of nurses and midwives working in public hospitals
title_sort research utilisation in clinical practice: the experience of nurses and midwives working in public hospitals
publisher BMC
series Reproductive Health
issn 1742-4755
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Background Nurses and midwives play a vital role to utilise research in clinical decision-making practice. However, limited support for research utilisation and barriers of research utilisation hamper to utilise up-to-date research findings in clinical practice. Therefore, this study aimed to explore nurses’ and midwives’ experience of research utilisation in public hospitals. Methods A qualitative descriptive approach was conducted to explore nurses’ and midwives’ experience of research utilisation in clinical practice within South Gondar Zone public hospitals from January 3 to June 28, 2020. A total of 20 interviewees, 40 participants of FGDs, and 8 observations were considered in the study. Data from the interview, FGD, and observation were imported into NVivo 12 plus to manage and analyze the data using the Computer-Assisted Data Analysis Software Program (CAQDAS). The data were analyzed through thematic content analysis. Results Nurses’ and midwives’ experience of using research findings in clinical decision-making emerged as “the non-intentional research utilisation” the main theme. Data analysis produced as “the belief towards research utilisation”, “the limited support for nurses and midwives”, and, “the perceived barriers of research utilisation” as the three themes. Participants believed that the non-use of the primary research was recommended due to fear of accountability for client harm. The limited support for nurses’ and midwives’ experience of research utilisation decrease nurses’ and midwives’ confidence to utilise research in clinical practice. Knowledge, attitude, time mismanagement, and the lack of motivation were perceived barriers to research utilisation. The lack of training and access to systematic review and meta-analysis research findings limited the research utilisation in clinical practice. Conclusions The experience of research utilisation indicated that there was limited support for nurses and midwives to utilise research. Nurses and midwives did not utilise research in their clinical practice intentionally. This study identified that knowledge, negative attitude towards research utilisation, lack of training; time mismanagement, and lack of motivation were the perceived barriers to research utilisation. Therefore, the promotion of adopting the research utilisation and training on the identified barriers are mandatory. Plain English summary Nurses and midwives play a vital role to utilise research in clinical decision-making practice. However, the limited support for research utilisation and barriers of research utilisation hamper the utilisation of up-to-date research in clinical practice. Therefore, this study aimed to explore nurses’ and midwives’ experience of using the knowledge obtained from research findings in clinical and healthcare decision-making practice within public hospitals. The experience of research utilisation among nurses and midwives working in public hospitals was studied. There was limited support for nurses’ and midwives’ experience of research utilisation. Nurses and midwives did not utilise research in their clinical practice intentionally. The knowledge, negative attitude towards research utilisation, lack of training, time mismanagement, and lack of motivation were the perceived barriers to research utilisation. Therefore, the promotion of adopting the research utilisation and training on the identified barriers are mandatory.
topic Research utilisation
Barriers
Supporting factors of research utilisation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-021-01095-x
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