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American Journal of Critical Care. 2008;17: 315-326
Copyright © 2008 by the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
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CE Article

The Power of Clinical Nursing Research: Engage Clinicians, Improve Patients’ Lives, and Forge a Professional Legacy

By Anna Gawlinski, RN, DNSc, CS, ACNP. Anna Gawlinski is director of evidence-based practice at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Medical Center and is an adjunct professor at the UCLA School of Nursing.

Corresponding author: Anna Gawlinski, RN, DNSc, CS, ACNP, UCLA Medical Center, Room 14-176CHS, 10833 LeConte Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90095 (e-mail: AGawlinski{at}mednet.ucla.edu).

Sparked by the Institute of Medicine’s report titled Crossing the Quality Chasm, research-based decision making has been emphasized for improving care. Patients should receive care that is based on the best available scientific knowledge, and care should not vary from clinician to clinician or from place to place. Implementing research-based practices at the bedside is a complex endeavor. It is all too easy to discover that clinically important research findings are either not known by practitioners or not being used in actual practice. Efforts to instill and sustain research-based practices improve significantly when staff nurses are involved with the research from the start. Institutions that are effective in involving clinicians have built a foundation of infrastructures that enable processes for engaging clinicians to take place. What distinguishes effective from ineffective hospital nursing research and evidence-based practice programs is the presence of structures whereby processes can occur that (1) unleash the creativity of staff by securing their involvement early, (2) educate staff by involving them, (3) create internal expertise for research and evidence-based practice, and (4) ensure that patients experience principled implementation of research-based practices to improve their lives. This article describes infrastructures that can ensure and sustain research-based practices while unleashing the talent and creativity of clinicians as they question practice and ponder the merits of current research. Fostering participation in such clinical inquiry will summon professional growth, influence the lives of patients, and help each nurse develop a unique personal professional legacy.

Notice to CE enrollees:
A closed-book, multiple-choice examination following this article tests your understanding of the following objectives:
  1. Describe infrastructures that can ensure and sustain research-based practice.
  2. Understand how fostering participation in structures that advance research-based practices can summon professional growth.
  3. Recognize that efforts to implement and sustain research-based practices improve markedly when staff nurses are involved with the research from the beginning.
To read this article and take the CE test online, visit www.ajcconline.org and click "CE Articles in This Issue." No CE test fee for AACN members.







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Copyright © 2008 by the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.