Evidence-Based Practice for Nurses

(Ben Green) #1

A Glimpse of the Past


Before 1900
Florence Nightingale is considered by most to be the first nurse researcher.
One could say that, as an innovator, she was the first nurse to create an EBP.
Through the systematic collection and analysis of data, she identified factors
that contributed to the high morbidity and mortality rates of British soldiers
during the Crimean War (1853–1856). Health reforms based on her evidence
significantly reduced these rates. Her observations during the war led her to
theorize that environmental factors were critical influences on the health of
individuals. In 1859, she disseminated her ideas in Notes on Nursing: What It
Is, and What It Is Not (1859/1946), which continues to be in print today. Even
though Nightingale was an innovator in nursing research, 40 years passed before
nursing research reemerged as relevant to nursing practice.

1900–1929
During the first quarter of the 20th century, the focus of nursing research was
closely aligned with the social and political climate. Women were empowered
by the suffragette movement; thus their interest in higher education increased.
Nursing education became the focus of nursing research. The work of nursing
leaders such as Lavinia Dock, Mary Adelaide Nutting, Isabel Hampton Robb,
and Lillian Wald was instrumental in reforming nursing education. Similarly,
the Goldmark Report (1923) identified many inadequacies in nursing educa-
tion and recommended that advanced educational preparation for nurses was

Research

Dissemination

Application

Theory

Social &
political
factors

FIGURE 1-4 Cycle of Scientific Development


24 CHAPTER 1 What Is Evidence-Based Practice?

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