Searching Databases

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Review the Resources and identify a clinical issue of interest that can form the basis of a clinical inquiry.
Review the materials offering guidance on using databases, performing keyword searches, and developing PICO(T) questions provided in the Resources.
Based on the clinical issue of interest and using keywords related to the clinical issue of interest, search at least two different databases in the Walden Library to identify at least four relevant peer-reviewed articles related to your clinical issue of interest. You should not be using systematic reviews for this assignment, select original research articles.
Review the Resources for guidance and develop a PICO(T) question of interest to you for further study. It is suggested that an Intervention-type PICOT question be developed as these seem to work best for this course.

*Library tip:

Walden Library recommends starting your search broadly with one concept or search word and adding more elements one at a time. Depending on your topic, the evidence will not necessarily address all the aspects of your PICO(T) question in one article. Select the most important concepts to search and find the best evidence available, even if that means assembling evidence from multiple articles.

Nursing Research PageLinks to an external site. – databases and resources specifically for Nursing
Evidence-Based Practice guide: Evidence TypesLinks to an external site.
Nursing and Health research videosLinks to an external site., including a 15-minute introduction
Get HelpLinks to an external site. page, including Ask a LibrarianLinks to an external site. service

Quick Answers:

How do I find an article that reports on research that uses a specific methodology?Links to an external site.
How do I find original or primary research that analyzes empirical data?Links to an external site.
What is the Find at Walden button?Links to an external site.

Post a brief description of your clinical issue of interest. This clinical issue will remain the same for the entire course and will be the basis for the development of your PICOT question. Describe your search results in terms of the number of articles returned on original research and how this changed as you added search terms using your Boolean operators. Finally, explain strategies you might make to increase the rigor and effectiveness of a database search on your PICO(T) question. Be specific and provide examples.


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Matrix Worksheet
Template
Matrix Worksheet Template
Use this document to complete Part 1 of the Module 2 Assessment, Evidence-Based Project, Part 1: Identifying Research
Methodologies
Full citation of
selected article
Article #1
Alomari, A.,
Sheppard‐Law, S.,
Lewis, J., & Wilson, V.
(2020). Effectiveness of
clinical nurses’
interventions in
reducing medication
errors in a paediatric
ward. Journal of
Clinical Nursing, 29(1718), 3403-3413.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j
ocn.15374
Article #2
Berdot, S., Vilfaillot, A.,
Bezie, Y., Perrin, G.,
Berge, M., Corny, J., &
Sabatier, B. (2021).
Effectiveness of a ‘do
not interrupt’ vest
intervention to reduce
medication errors
during medication
administration: A
multicenter cluster
randomized controlled
trial. BMC Nursing,
20(1), 153.
https://doi.org/10.1186/
s12912-021-00671-7
© 2021 Walden University, LLC
Article #3
Manias, E., Cranswick,
N., Newall, F.,
Rosenfeld, E., Weiner,
C., Williams, A., &
Kinney, S. (2019).
Medication error trends
and effects of
person‐related,
environment‐related
and
communication‐related
factors on medication
errors in a paediatric
hospital. Journal of
Paediatrics and Child
Health, 55(3), 320-326.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j
pc.14193
Article #4
Westbrook, J. I., Li, L.,
Raban, M. Z., Woods,
A., Koyama, A. K.,
Baysari, M. T., & White,
L. (2021). Associations
between doublechecking and
medication
administration errors: a
direct observational
study of paediatric
inpatients. BMJ Quality
& Safety, 30(4), 320330.
https://doi.org/10.1136/
bmjqs-2020-011473
1
Why you chose this
article and/or how it
relates to the clinical
issue of interest
(include a brief
explanation of the
ethics of research
related to your clinical
issue of interest)
This article was
selected because it reports
the findings of action
research study on
interventions to reduce
medication errors. The
article is a peer-reviewed
journal article on various
interventions for medication
errors. It relates to the
clinical issue of interest
because it focuses on
means to address errors.
The study observes the
ethical consideration of
autonomy and informed
consent. This relates to the
research participants’ right
to withdraw from the study
at any moment.
This article was
selected for its contribution
to the research on solutions
to reduce medication errors.
It is a randomized controlled
trial on medication error
interventions to reduce
interruptions during
medication administration.
The article provides
evidence regarding the use
of ‘do not interrupt’ vests in
medications administration.
A potential ethical issue in
this study is the
confidentiality of patients’
information and data. All
data in the study was
processed anonymously
and participants’ identity
was protected.
The rationale for
selecting this study is its
reporting on factors
associated with medication
errors. It was selected
because it outlines
important factors to consider
in order to reduce errors. It
relates to the issue of
concern by outlining factors
leading to the problem of
medication errors. As a
retrospective evaluation, the
article has few ethical
concerns. However, it is still
necessary to ensure
informed consent is
obtained from the
participants. This study
presents no need for
informed consent.
Brief description of
the aims of the
research of each
peer-reviewed article
The aim of the study
was to test the effectiveness
of a bundle of interventions
to reduce medication errors.
The researchers’ aim was to
develop and implement
medication error reduction
interventions. This research
served to test the
effectiveness of the
methods and implemented
interventions. These
included mobile medication
The aim of the research
was to evaluate whether
wearing a ‘do not interrupt’
vest reduced medication
administration errors. The
‘do not interrupt’ vest is an
intervention whereby nurses
can reduce interruptions
from the environment when
administering medications.
The aim for the study was to
determine whether the vest
appropriately reduced
This study aimed to
retrospectively evaluate the
number of errors reported in
a hospital. The setting was
an Australian pediatric
hospital. The researchers
aimed to determine the
rates of errors in a five-year
period and also identify
person-, environment-, and
communication-related
factors affecting severity of
errors. The study sought to
© 2021 Walden University, LLC
This study was selected
for the project because of its
focus on medication
administration errors. It
contributes to the current
project by identifying a
potential intervention to
reduce errors. The topic of
medication errors is
associated with patient
harm and this article was
selected due to its potential
to reduce errors and hence
harm to the patients. The
study recruited pediatric
patients, a vulnerable
population. It is essential to
consider the rights of the
children and potential
impact of research on their
well-being. This study
presented no foreseeable
harm but also included
ethics approval.
The purpose of the
study was to improve
medications safety by
reviewing effectiveness of
an intervention. The
intervention was doublechecking, a process for
nurses to separately check
information and then share
it. The researchers identified
the lack of quantification of
double-checking in
preventing medication
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administration trolleys,
parental involvement,
monthly safety and quality
meetings, change in
medication administration
hours, and policy revision.
Brief description of
the research
methodology used
Be sure to identify if
the methodology used
was qualitative,
quantitative, or a
mixed-methods
approach. Be specific.
The methodology used
was action-research using a
quantitative research
approach. Quantitative
research involves statistical
data and hypothesis testing
(Hoare & Hoe, 2013). In this
study, for instance, the main
outcome is the rates of
medication errors reported
as errors per 1,000
prescribed medications. The
researchers evaluated the
rates of errors before and
after the interventions,
essentially a pre- and posttest quantitative approach.
interruptions and
consequently led to safer
medication administration.
This study focuses on a
potential solution to reduce
medication administration
errors in the ward.
The study was
conducted using a
quantitative methodology.
Specifically, it is defined as
a multicenter cluster
randomized controlled trial.
In this methodology, the
study was conducted by
randomly selecting hospitals
to participate in the study. A
comparison of pre- and
post-intervention rates of
errors in the intervention
and control groups was
conducted. Data was
analyzed using descriptive
statistics approach.
A brief description of
the strengths of each
of the research
methodologies used,
including reliability
and validity of how
the methodology was
The main strength of the
research methodology used
in this article is the inclusion
of employees and the valid
evaluation of the pre- and
post-intervention outcomes.
Action-research is
This study is reliable
and valid and preferred due
to the methodology. The
preference for randomized
controlled trial reduces bias
and enhances attribution of
outcomes to the
© 2021 Walden University, LLC
establish the frequency and
severity of errors including
factors that affected the
latter.
errors. The study, therefore,
sought to fill that gap and
determine whether doublechecking was associated
with reduction of frequency
and severity of errors.
The research
methodology was a
quantitative retrospective
audit of the hospital. The
audit was performed
through a collection of
quantitative statistical data
on medication errors.
Medication errors were
reported as errors per 1000
bed days. Data was
analyzed statistically using
SPSS with univariate
associations and multiple
logistic regression analysis.
The study is a
quantitative methodology
approach for analyzing
errors through observation.
Among participants, a
trained observer was
recruited to examine their
process for medications
preparation and
administration including
identifying any errors.
Medication administration
errors were also rated for
severity. Researchers then
compared errors before and
after intervention using
statistical data analysis.
This study has a good
quality of research and
methodology used for the
research process. The
researchers used a
retrospective study
approach. The advantage of
The direct observation of
staff presents a strength as
well as a weakness. On the
one hand, it promotes less
biased reporting and data
analysis to ensure a valid
and reliable process.
3
applied in each of the
peer-reviewed articles
you selected.
advantageous in that the
staff are involved in making
permanent changes
(Banegas & de Castro,
2019). It can be classified
as a form of quality
improvement with a
research aspect. The main
tool used to measure
outcomes apart from rates
of errors was the Safety
Attitudes Questionnaire
(SAQ), a validated tool. The
reliability of the tool is high
with Cronbach alpha of 0.9
and validity acceptable. The
research methodology was
rigorous and hence the
article presents a valid and
reliable resource to consult
in the clinical issue
research.
interventions (Hoare & Hoe,
2013). Moreover, the study
was conducted in several
hospitals, increasing its
reliability and
generalizability. Reliability is
the confidence that the
outcomes can be replicated
and validity is the
confidence that the study
measures what it purports to
measure (Hoe & Hoare,
2012). It is reliable due to
the inclusion of several
hospitals. It is valid because
trained observers have
been deployed in the study.
this methodology is that
there is little risk of bias as
the evaluated events have
already occurred. Therefore,
a retrospective audit and
data analysis presents a
more objective and less
biased approach. The study
is valid since specific
records for medication
errors with voluntary
reporting were maintained
and used in this study.
Similarly, it is reliable
because the reporting
system and measures
remained constant
throughout the data
collection period.
Observers were rigorously
trained. On the other hand,
observation may increase
compliance with policy due
to the presence of the
observer in the participant’s
environment (Fix et al.,
2022). The Precise
Observation System for the
Safe Use of Medicines
(POSSUM) was the tool
used and its reliability is
high, about 0.83 alpha level.
It has also acceptable
validity. Overall, the article
presents an important
contribution in the
evaluation of doublechecking interventions.
General
Notes/Comments
© 2021 Walden University, LLC
4
References
Alomari, A., Sheppard‐Law, S., Lewis, J., & Wilson, V. (2020). Effectiveness of clinical nurses’ interventions in reducing medication
errors in a paediatric ward. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 29(17-18), 3403-3413. https://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.15374
Banegas, D. L., & de Castro, L. S. V. (2019). Action research. In The Routledge handbook of English language teacher education (pp.
570-582). Routledge.
Berdot, S., Vilfaillot, A., Bezie, Y., Perrin, G., Berge, M., Corny, J., & Sabatier, B. (2021). Effectiveness of a ‘do not interrupt’ vest
intervention to reduce medication errors during medication administration: A multicenter cluster randomized controlled trial.
BMC Nursing, 20(1), 153. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12912-021-00671-7
Fix, G. M., Kim, B., Ruben, M. A., & McCullough, M. B. (2022). Direct observation methods: A practical guide for health
researchers. PEC Innovation, 1, 100036. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pecinn.2022.100036
Hoare, Z., & Hoe, J. (2013). Understanding quantitative research: Part 2. Nursing Standard, 27(18), 48–55.
https://doi.org/10.7748/ns2013.01.27.18.48.c9488
Hoe, J., & Hoare, Z. (2012). Understanding quantitative research: Part 1. Nursing Standards 27(15), 52–57.
https://doi.org/10.7748/ns2012.12.27.15.52.c9485
Manias, E., Cranswick, N., Newall, F., Rosenfeld, E., Weiner, C., Williams, A., & Kinney, S. (2019). Medication error trends and
effects of person‐related, environment‐related and communication‐related factors on medication errors in a paediatric hospital.
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health, 55(3), 320-326. https://doi.org/10.1111/jpc.14193
Westbrook, J. I., Li, L., Raban, M. Z., Woods, A., Koyama, A. K., Baysari, M. T., & White, L. (2021). Associations between doublechecking and medication administration errors: a direct observational study of paediatric inpatients. BMJ Quality & Safety,
30(4), 320-330. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2020-011473
© 2021 Walden University, LLC
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