CHAPTER
ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background
to the Study
The
increased emphasis internationally on clinical and cost effectiveness in health
policy has highlighted the need for quality health services to be built upon
the use of best evidence (McKenna, Ashton & Keeney, 2010). Various
governments have introduced initiatives to support the development of
evidence-based healthcare systems in which decisions made by healthcare
practitioners, managers, policy makers and patients are based on high quality
evidence. Activity has focused on developing evidence-based guidelines for clinical
interventions. For example, in the USA, the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality leads national efforts in the use of evidence to guide healthcare
decisions.
Evidence-based
practice (EBP) is an interdisciplinary approach to clinical practice that
started in medicine as evidence based medicine (EBM) and spread to other fields
such as dentistry, nursing, psychology, education, library, information science
and other fields. (Titler, Cullen & Ardery, 2013). Polit and Beck (2011)
define EBP as requiring the use of the best available research evidence and
practical experience to make clinical decisions. EBP leads to cost-efficient,
quality patient care and improved patient outcomes (Burns & Grove, 2010). Policy,
political and professional imperatives have made EBP a clinical prerequisite
for daily practice. Over the years since its formal introduction in 1992, EBP
has emerged as a major policy theme in Western healthcare systems, especially,
the United States of America (USA), Australia and the United Kingdom (Rycroft-Malone,
2011).
EBP
is not only applying research-based evidence to assist in making decision about
the healthcare of patients but rather extends to identify the knowledge gaps
and finding systematically appraising and condensing the evidence to assist
clinical expertise, rather than replacing it (Elshaug, 2010). In accordance
with most health-related professions, there has been a growing focus on quality
improvement including moving from a traditional intuition-based paradigm to
evidence-based nursing practice (EBNP) (Melnyk & Fineout-Overholt, 2011).
The
EBNP process consists of five stages: (1) formulating a question that will yield
the most suitable answer; (2) gathering the most relevant information by
systematic search of the literature or clinical guidelines; (3) performing
critical evaluation of the evidence and its validity, relevance and feasibility;
(4) integrating research evidence with clinical experience, patients’ values and
preferences and (5) assessing treatment outcomes (Melnyk & Fineout-Overholt,
2010). Implementing EBNP is potentially beneficial for patients and healthcare
systems in general, and for nurses in particular. It enhances patients’ access
to information about effective treatment (Melnyk & Fineout-Overholt, 2012).
EBNP can also improve the healthcare system by facilitating consistent decision
making and advancing cost-effectiveness. Furthermore, EBNP can help nurses by
facilitating informed and evidence-based clinical decision-making, support them
to bewell informed with technologies and enable greater efficiency (Melnyk &
Fineout-Overholt, 2011).
EBP
in nursing has been strongly presented in the agendas of many professional
organisations as an undergraduate requirement in countries, like the USA,
Canada and Jordan (Baumbusch, 2010). Among the many professional organisations
is the Jordanian Nursing Council (JNC), which emphasizes the implementation of
EBP as one fundamental component of nursing practice and education (Jordanian
Nursing Council, 2010).It is believed that the evidence-based practice in
nursing education should commence in the undergraduate preparation, which
provide the skills required to find, analyze and, later, synthesize best evidence
for practice (Balakas & Sparks, 2010). Therefore, assessing factors
influencing the implementation of EBP in nursing programs, withfuture graduate
nurses, is crucial to prepare nursing graduates to adopt and implement these
principles in their work.
Despite
the plethora of literature on what evidence-based nursing is and is not, EBP in
nursing education is still struggling and has not been addressed adequately.
Many researchers identified that some problems that inhibit the implementation
of EBP in nursing practice (Brown, 2009; Thompson, 2010), include insufficient
educators’ skills and time to find research studies, inadequate knowledge on
how to evaluate research findings, and lack of organisational support, lack of
adequate understanding of technologies associated with the teaching strategies promoting
EBP such as the use of human simulation in the nursing laboratories and lack of
consensus on the best strategies, material, time and level of students to
engage in EBP (Stichler, 2013). Other related
problem to teaching process, especially
in undergraduate education, focuses mainly on the process of deducting evidence
from research rather than conducting research (Ciliska, 2010) abandoning an
essential component of EBP.
By and large, the predicament of EBP
is enormous. Thus, in Nigeria, EBP is still far from its realizations and under
studied. It is in line with the above that the researcher seeks to find out
factors that influence the implementation of evidence-based practice among
nurses in selected tertiary hospitals in Enugu urban.
Statement of the Problem
Research has shown that evidence-based
practice (EBP) leads to higher quality care, improved patient outcomes, reduced
costs and greater nurse satisfaction than traditional approaches to care
(Melnyk & Fineout-Overholt, 2011). Despite these favorable findings, many
nurses remain inconsistent in their implementation of EBP (Stevens, 2011).
According to Egerod and Hansen, (2012) nurses prefer to be informed by
colleagues, rather than using the internet or nursing databases and most nurses
rely only on what they learned during their nursing education and from
experience. Even nurses with substantial knowledge about evaluating research
evidence find themselves powerless and with limited authority to introduce
changes in their workplaces (Banning, 2012).
In Nigeria, Ojong, Ukaegbu and Ebong (
2012) observed that the implementation of EBP which is the bedrock of higher
quality care and best patient outcomes has beenneglected and abandoned in many
if not all Nigerian hospitals. In National Orthopaedic Hospital,Enugu (NOHE)
and Enugu State University Teaching Hospital (ESUTH) which are the areas of
study,the researcher has observed that nurses do not utilize current nursing
approaches to EBP and nursing process in care of patients despite numerous
workshops that have been organised in these areas.
These have raised some basic questions
in the researcher’s mind thus- Are there personal/individual and
organisational/institutional factors influencing the implementation of EBP? Are
there potential interventions that will motivate nurses to implement EBP? This
study is an attempt to answer the above questions.
Purpose of the Study
The purpose of
this study is to investigate the factors that influence the implementation of
evidence-based practice among nurses in selected tertiary hospitals in Enugu
urban.
Objectives of the Study
The specific
objectives are to: