Different Types of Healthcare Research Methodologies :Hospital Acquired Condition
The purpose of a research plan is to provide a brief overview of the key components of a planned research study. It helps to build quality into the research process. During this course, you have, step by step, developed an abbreviated research plan contributing to a process improvement focused on decreasing the incidence of a hospital-acquired condition (HAC) of your choice. As you have progressed the course, you may have improved your ideas and revised your writing based on new information and the expertise you have gained. To complete this final assessment, combine relevant work from your previous assessments into one seamless research plan. Be sure to incorporate any useful feedback suggested by your instructor, and be sure to properly cite all resources used to support your plan. For this assessment it is suggested that you build upon the work that you did in the Research Problem and Purpose Statements assessment, as well as the research question and methods assessment that fits the method you chose. This assessment has four distinct parts:
Part 1: Problem Statement
Relevant Scoring Guide Criteria:
- Explain a given problem statement in the context of a research plan.
- Align the separate parts of a research plan into a unified whole.
- Communicate in a manner that is scholarly, professional, and respectful of the diversity, dignity, and integrity of others and is consistent with expectations for health care professionals.
For this section, present your revised and finalized problem statement based on your work in the Research Problem and Purpose Statements assessment. Additionally, you will explain how the purpose statement is grounded within the context and evidence of your chosen hospital-acquired condition (HAC) and the health care setting that is being used as the basis for your research plan. Additionally, you should point out the ways in which the problem statement will help to establish the alignment of other parts of the research plan. This section should be about one page in length. Remember, the checklist below when finalizing your problem statement. Problem Statement Checklist Identify the problem that led to the research.
- Is it easy to determine?
- Were there identifying words provided that justify the problem?
- Was the rationale or justification of the problem clearly stated?
- Do the words in the problem statement indicate the kind of study performed? Which words in particular?
- Was the evidence for the problem provided in the literature?
Part 2: Purpose Statement
Relevant Scoring Guide Criteria:
- Explain a given purpose statement in the context of a research plan.
- Align the separate parts of a research plan into a unified whole.
- Communicate in a manner that is scholarly, professional, and respectful of the diversity, dignity, and integrity of others and is consistent with expectations for health care professionals.
For this section, present your revised and finalized purpose statement based on your work in the Research Problem and Purpose Statements assessment.Additionally, you will explain how the purpose statement is grounded within the context and evidence of your chosen hospital-acquired condition (HAC) and the health care setting that is being used as the basis for your research plan. Additionally, you should point out the ways in which the purpose statement is aligned with you problem statement, as well as how it will help inform an aligned methodological choice for other parts of the research plan.This section should be one to two pages in length.Remember to use the checklist below when finalizing your purpose statement.Purpose Statement Checklist:Identify the purpose that led to the research study.
- What does the study hope to accomplish? What are the desired outcomes?
- Was the rationale or justification of the purpose clearly stated?
- Do the words in the purpose statement indicate the kind of study performed? What words in particular?
- Was the item cited as evidence for the purpose published within the last five years?
Part 3: Research Question
Relevant Scoring Guide Criteria:
- Explain a given research question in the context of a research plan.
- Align the separate parts of a research plan into a unified whole.
- Communicate in a manner that is scholarly, professional, and respectful of the diversity, dignity, and integrity of others and is consistent with expectations for health care professionals.
For this section, present your revised and finalized research question. This research question should be based on your work in either the Qualitative Research Questions and Methods or the Quantitative Research Questions and Methods assessment. Additionally, you will explain how the research question is grounded within the context and evidence of your chosen hospital-acquired condition (HAC) and the health care setting that is being used as the basis for your research plan. Additionally, you should point out the ways in which the research question is aligned to the purpose of your research plan, as well as how answering it will help to address your research problem. You should also comment on the ways in which the research question helps to provide a guide to which data collection methods can be aligned. This section should be one to two pages in length. Depending on your chosen methodology, the checklists below could be useful. Qualitative Research Question Checklist:
- Does the purpose statement fit logically with the problem statement? Are there similar words or does it seem to address a different topic?
- Do the research questions align with the method and design of the study? For instance, are words like perception used that would automatically reject a quantitative study?
- Do questions seek to describe responses to the variables described in the study?
- Do the questions begin with the word why?
- Do the questions focus on a single phenomenon?
- Do the questions include exploratory verbs?
- Is the language nondirectional?
- Are the questions open ended?
- Do the questions specify the participants and research site?
Quantitative Research Question Checklist
- Does the purpose statement fit logically with the problem statement? Are there similar words or does it seem to address a different topic?
- Based on the problem statement, do the research questions align with the method and design of the study? Do questions seek to describe responses to the variables described in the study?
- Do the questions include words like compare, correlate, or other words that indicate a quantitative study?
- Do the questions include identification of the independent and dependent variables?
- Does the hypothesis fit with the research questions?
- Do the questions and hypothesis identify the participants for the research study?
- Do the questions and hypothesis specify the participants and the research site?
Part 4: Data Collection, Reliability, and Validity
Relevant Scoring Guide Criteria:
- Explain a chosen data collection method in the context of a research plan.
- Describe a contextually valid data collection method.
- Explain contextual measurement reliability and validity.
- Align the separate parts of a research plan into a unified whole.
- Communicate in a manner that is scholarly, professional, and respectful of the diversity, dignity, and integrity of others and is consistent with expectations for health care professionals.
For this section you will start by building upon the data collection methods, tools, and strategies from your work in either the Qualitative Research Questions and Methods or the Quantitative Research Questions and Methods assessment. Make sure you use the data collection considerations that match the methodology of your research question.In this section you will describe the ways in which your data collection methods will be valid within the context of your chosen HAC and health care setting, as well as your choice of methodology. Additionally, you will explain how the measurements that your chosen collection methods will produce are reliable and valid. lastly, you will comment on how the data collection methods are aligned in such a way that they will produce information that will help to answer the research question and create an opportunity to address the research purpose and problem.