Potential Concerns

Potential Concerns

Respond to the post bellow in one or more of the following ways:

Ask a probing question, substantiated with additional background information, and evidence.

Share an insight from having read your colleagues’ postings, synthesizing the information to provide new perspectives.

Offer and support an alternative perspective using readings from  the classroom or from your own review of the literature in the Walden  Library.

Validate an idea with your own experience and additional sources.

Make a suggestion based on additional evidence drawn from readings or after synthesizing multiple postings.

Expand on your colleagues’ postings by providing additional insights or contrasting perspectives based on readings and evidence.

 

Main Post

Effect of a Nurse-Driven Mobility Protocol

The  title of the study that I have chosen is “the effect of a nurse-driven  mobility protocol.” The population that this study focuses on is that of  older adults. The participants who took part in the study were only 50.  The purpose of the study was to find out if patients had a better  outcome of functional mobility and a decline in the length of stay after  discharge in case a nurse-driven mobility model was employed. The  nurse-driven mobility protocol that was used in the study was the  Geriatric Friendly Environmental through Nursing Evaluation and Specific  Interventions for Successful Healing. Thus nurse-driven agility was  used before the study was conducted and this gave the nurses an  opportunity to train before the study. This protocol allows the nurses  to walk patients two to three times a day for meals or to the washrooms  (Padula, Hughes, &Baumhover, 2009).

Potential Concerns

Validity  means the degree of credibility and accuracy of information provided  during a study. Internal validity is the liberated variable being the  reason for the results as opposed to several other factors. In this  study, the internal validity is at risk from the reality that most of  the research participants in the treatment group are at a lesser risk  for falls than those from the control group (Metheny, Davis-Jackson,  & Stewart, 2010). This can have an effect on the validity of  information during the research study. This is because if the treatment  group were at a lower risk for falls, the group would be more  self-sufficient before the study which can affect the outcomes of the  research.

Another  concern could also be seen where the staff may seem reluctant to walk  their patients for long distances in case the patient is at risk for  falls. Another problem of validity that can be encountered is the fact  that there is no distinct definition of the exact number of times that a  patient should be walked through and the distance to be covered by the  control group. Lack of data showing the exact number of patients who  were in the control and the treatment groups could also harm the  internal validity. Another concern that may affect the validity of  information may arise where patients from a nursing home may not  participate actively as compared to those new from home.

Recommendations to Reinforce Internal Validity