TY - JOUR
T1 - Doctoral theses in nursing and midwifery
T2 - Challenging their contribution to nursing scholarship and the profession
AU - Wilkes, Lesley
AU - Cummings, Joanne
AU - Ratanapongleka, Mayryl
AU - Carter, Bernie
PY - 2015/6/1
Y1 - 2015/6/1
N2 - Objective To determine the impact and outputs of research conducted as part of doctoral studies in nursing. Design An online survey was conducted with 27 nursing doctoral graduates from United Kingdom and Australia who had graduated between 2001 and 2012. Textual and numerical data were collected and sorted on outcomes of research for management, education, practice and workforce. Numerical data were collected from journal article outputs regarding impact factors and citation rates; as well as demographic information on graduates. Frequencies were tallied, percentages calculated for both textual and numerical data and tables and figures formulated. Setting University and health sector. Subjects Doctoral nursing graduates who graduated between 2001 and 2012 from universities in Australia and the United Kingdom were recruited to complete the online survey. Main outcome measure The outcomes and outputs of doctoral research are usually implied in the theses but assessment of these is often not apparent in the literature or clinical area. There is little evidence to demonstrate whether or not the nursing profession is influenced by the outcomes of and outputs from nurses’ doctoral studies. Results The top three topic areas covered by their theses were paediatrics, acute care and the role of nurses in practice. The key outputs from the 21 doctoral studies were 86 publications. Articles from the individual theses had verified citations ranging from 0 to 75. Outcomes from the research were evident in contributions to policy development, models of care, workplace issues at universities, and nursing curricula. Conclusion The study shows the need for nursing research at the doctoral level should be directed towards professional needs which ultimately impact on patient care.
AB - Objective To determine the impact and outputs of research conducted as part of doctoral studies in nursing. Design An online survey was conducted with 27 nursing doctoral graduates from United Kingdom and Australia who had graduated between 2001 and 2012. Textual and numerical data were collected and sorted on outcomes of research for management, education, practice and workforce. Numerical data were collected from journal article outputs regarding impact factors and citation rates; as well as demographic information on graduates. Frequencies were tallied, percentages calculated for both textual and numerical data and tables and figures formulated. Setting University and health sector. Subjects Doctoral nursing graduates who graduated between 2001 and 2012 from universities in Australia and the United Kingdom were recruited to complete the online survey. Main outcome measure The outcomes and outputs of doctoral research are usually implied in the theses but assessment of these is often not apparent in the literature or clinical area. There is little evidence to demonstrate whether or not the nursing profession is influenced by the outcomes of and outputs from nurses’ doctoral studies. Results The top three topic areas covered by their theses were paediatrics, acute care and the role of nurses in practice. The key outputs from the 21 doctoral studies were 86 publications. Articles from the individual theses had verified citations ranging from 0 to 75. Outcomes from the research were evident in contributions to policy development, models of care, workplace issues at universities, and nursing curricula. Conclusion The study shows the need for nursing research at the doctoral level should be directed towards professional needs which ultimately impact on patient care.
KW - Nurse education
KW - Research dissemination
KW - Research in practice
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M3 - Article (journal)
AN - SCOPUS:84931028863
SN - 0813-0531
VL - 32
SP - 6
EP - 14
JO - Australian Journal of Advanced Nursing
JF - Australian Journal of Advanced Nursing
IS - 4
ER -