Verified Document

Comparing Qualitative Study Approaches Research Paper

Related Topics:

Critical Appraisal of Research Studies: Surgical Site Infections (SSI)

Surgical site infections (SSIs) are a serious source of concern worldwide. They are not only a health risk to patients but also pose a significant risk in terms of an increase in antibiotic-resistant bacteria infections. Yet, there is a gap between theoretical knowledge of how to prevent such infections and how providers implement them. The issue of SSIs has been quantitatively identified as a serious issue and is especially disheartening, given it is a preventable one: an estimated 60% of all SSIs are preventable, if providers follow guidelines (Mengesha et al., 2020).

This failure of compliance, however, is not particularly to underserved or low-resource medical systems. Prevalence of SSIs is around 19.6% in Europe, 20% in the U.S., and in Africa as low as 12% in Algeria and as high as 31% in Nigeria (Mengesha et al., 2020). Within Ethiopia alone, infection rates in different regions vary widely from 10.9%-19.1% (Mengesha et al., 2020). In resource-poor countries, SSIs pose an even more considerable drain in terms of unnecessary costs. There is also the concern for increasing the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, with multidrug resistance as high as 82.9%, in countries where antibiotic shortages are rife and options are limited (Mengesha et al., 2020). This article will review the prevalence of SSIs quantitatively and then review two qualitative studies that attempt to address the issue through meaningful approaches.

In one study conducted by Mengesha (et al., 2020) surveying nurses in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, less than half of the 409 participants observed evidence-based guidelines (48.9%) to prevent SSIs. The study found that male nurses, greater education of providers, and more extensive work experience were all correlated with greater adherence to infection prevention guidelines (Mengesha et al., 2020). This suggested that greater education and setting higher educational standards for provider may result in lower rates of infection. A 25-item list of best practices, scored on a 1-4 Likert scale assessed compliance in a strictly quantitative fashion, spanning from questions about handwashing to the use of preoperative shaving and the use of appropriate antimicrobial agents (Mengesha et al., 2020).

Nurses were the focus of the study not to shift the focus away from physicians but because nurses often have the most significant roles in pre-and postoperative patient care after surgery, according to the study authors, and thus can have the greatest impact upon potential care improvement. Proper implementation of surgical safety checklists by nurses has been linked to reducing risk of infection; this also suggests that hospitals can have a significant role in creating standard operating procedures to make compliance the default, rather than something that nurses must consciously strive to fulfill....

…address noncompliance in some of the issues identified by Mengesha (et al., 2020). The Clean-Cut intervention strove to reduce SSI through handwashing and disinfecting, surgical gown and draping, antibiotics, sterilization, gauze counts, and using WHO checklists (Mattingly et al., 2019). Nurses were interviewed afterward to determine issues that prevented compliance, with responses focusing on a lack of resources, obstacles from hospital administration and staff, as well as their personal beliefs and education (Mattingly et al., 2019). Although in this instance only 20 participants were interviewed, the results suggested a more holistic approach to address noncompliance than focusing on education alone.

The qualitative study by Mattingly (et al., 2019) versus the qualitative study by Qvistgaard (et al., 2019) was structured after a specific improvement intervention, versus soliciting general information about nurses perceptions about why deviations from practice occurred. Viewed in conjunction, however, they are useful in providing a very specific window of personal insight through the lenses of nurses themselves. A lack of compliance with best practices is not solely due to ignorance, but rather arises because of a complex constellation of personal, institutional, and material pressures upon nurses. Reducing SSIs thus does not mean targeting nurses, but working with nurses so they can provide input about how institutions can do better, and create a better way to move forward to improve patient health in…

Sources used in this document:

References

Mattingly, A.S., Starr, N., Bitew, S., Forrester, J.A., Negussie, T., Merrell, S.B., & Weiser, T.G.

(2019). Qualitative outcomes of clean-cut: implementation lessons from reducing surgical infections in Ethiopia. BMC Health Services Research, 19 (1),1-10. https://doi-org.lopes.idm.oclc.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4383-8

Mengesha, A., Tewfik, N., Argaw, Z., Beletew, B., & Wudu, M. (2020). Practice of andassociated factors regarding prevention of surgical site infection among nurses working in the surgical units of public hospitals in Addis Ababa city, Ethiopia: A cross-sectional study. PloS one, 15(4), e0231270. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231270

Qvistgaard, M., Lovebo, J., & Almerud-Österberg, S. (2019). Intraoperative prevention ofsurgical site infections as experienced by operating room nurses. International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being, 14(1), 1632109. https://doi.org/10.1080/17482631.2019.1632109

Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Related Documents

Qualitative Study and Risk
Words: 2248 Length: 8 Document Type: Article Review

quality where data is gathered through interviews, surveys and observations, while quantitative study establishes its results on the basis of surveys, questionnaires and statistical data. A quantitative study "Study of Nurses' Knowledge about Palliative Care: A Quantitative Cross-sectional Survey" by Prem et al. can be compared with the qualitative study in question to understand the difference. The aim of this study is to assess the knowledge of nursing professionals

Anne-Marie Ambert's "A Qualitative Study
Words: 1578 Length: 5 Document Type: Thesis

To further ensure this, Ambert brought it interdependent and unbiased coders. 9. Qualitative Analyses However this is not implicit throughout the study, Anne-Marie Ambert seems to have used the cognitive styles analysis, which focuses on the future effects a past event may have upon the individual analyzed. For instance, peer abuse could materialize in conflicts with the parents, lowering grades or even failure in becoming socially integrated. The main codes were

Input 'Qualitative Studies' Into a Search Engine
Words: 668 Length: 2 Document Type: Article Review

Input 'qualitative studies' into a search engine and an abundant and myriad of studies pop up on the screen. What makes the article Rigor in qualitative social work research: A review of strategies used in published articles (Barusch, Gringeri, George, 2011) one that catches the reader's attention is that it is the epitome of a qualitative study accomplished with quantitative results. The difference between qualitative and quantitative studies are that

Quan and Qual Studies Qualitative Study Domestic
Words: 1704 Length: 6 Document Type: Article Critique

Quan and Qual Studies Qualitative Study Domestic violence is an ongoing experience of physical, psychological, and even sexual abuse in the home that is often a method used by one adult to establish control and power over another person. Exposure by children to marital aggression is now a recognized public health concern. The investigation of the effects of the exposure to this type of aggression on the functioning of a child is

Initial Qualitative Study on Nursing Attrition
Words: 2450 Length: 8 Document Type: Essay

Nurses Leaving? Findings from an Initial Qualitative Study on Nursing Attrition Substantive and Theoretical Dimensions Problem and Significance Conceptual Framework Methodological Dimensions Ethical Dimensions Interpretive Dimensions Presentation and Stylistic Dimension Qualitative Research Article Critique: Why Are Nurses Leaving? Findings from an Initial Qualitative Study on Nursing Attrition In her article Why Are Nurses Leaving? Findings from an Initial Qualitative Study on Nursing Attrition, MacKusick (2010) outlines the fact there is a nursing shortage that remains problematic, however, research

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now