In: Nursing
Research Models in Nursing Research
Determine the appropriate research design for each of the two questions below. Your post should include the research design you determined as well as an explanation of why you chose that particular research design. Remember to do this for each question.
Here are the questions:
1) It also showed a significant correlation between nurses
attitudes toward death and caring for dying patients.Based on the
obtained results, older registered nurses with more experience
tended to have more positive attitudes toward death and caring for
dying patients.Nurses are expected to care for death and many
patients at their end of life(EOL)stage. Care of death and the
dying provoke many undesired emotions and attitudes that reflect on
the quality of patients care. However, there are many factors that
can affect nurses attitudes
towards caring for death and dying patients such
as nurses demographics (age, gender, nursing
experience, and others). Which deserve carefully
designed studies. Yet, limited Jordanian studies
addressing these factors are available.Aim: The present study aims
to assess how Jordanian nurses providing care for terminal ill
patients feel about death and caring for dying patients and to
examine any relationships
between their attitudes and certain nursing
characteristics.Methods: A descriptive quantitative design was
utilized to accomplish the purpose of this study.A total of 155
nurses were recruited to participate in the study. The nurses
attitudes toward caring for dying patients were measured using
the
Frommelt Attitude toward Care of the Dying
(FATCOD) scale. The nurses' attitudes toward
death were measured using the Death Attitude
Profile Revised (DAP-R) scale.The t-test and F-test
were computed to examine the relationships
between nurses attitudes toward care of dying
and death and demographic factors.
Results: The present study showed that statistical
significant association was existed among age and nursing
experience with nurses attitudes toward death and caring for
terminal ill patients and the total scores on the FATCOD and DAP-R
respectively. It also showed a significant correlation between
nurses attitudes toward death and caring for dying
patients.Conclusion: Based on the obtained results, older
registered nurses with more experience tended to
have more positive attitudes toward death and
caring for dying patients. Therefore,understanding the effect of
nurses factors that are associated with their attitudes toward care
of dying and death can guide hospital and health
care agencies to devel.
2) STDs & Infertility
PID and silent infection in the
upper genital tract may cause permanent damage to the fallopian
tubes, uterus, and surrounding tissues, which can lead to
infertility. Most women infected with chlamydia or gonorrhea have
no symptoms.