Читать книгу Practitioner's Guide to Using Research for Evidence-Informed Practice - Allen Rubin - Страница 34
2 Steps in the EIP Process
Оглавление1 2.1 Step 1: Question Formulation
2 2.2 Step 2: Evidence Search 2.2.1 Some Useful Websites 2.2.2 Search Terms 2.2.3 An Internet Search Using Google Scholar and PsycINFO 2.2.4 A Time-Saving Tip
3 2.3 Step 3: Critically Appraising Studies and Reviews
4 2.4 Step 4: Selecting and Implementing the Intervention 2.4.1 Importance of Practice Context 2.4.2 How Many Studies Are Needed? 2.4.3 Client-Informed Consent
5 2.5 Step 5: Monitor Client Progress
6 2.6 Feasibility Constraints 2.6.1 Strategies for Overcoming Feasibility Obstacles
7 2.7 But What about the Dodo Bird Verdict? Key Chapter Concepts Review Exercises Additional Readings
As is discussed in Chapter 1, various authors have recommended a number of steps in the evidence-informed practice (EIP) process. Although not all authors agree on the exact number of steps and how to label them, they generally agree that the number is around five or six. More important, there is wide agreement as to what is to be done overall, regardless of the number of steps used to order them. In this chapter, five main steps in the EIP process are discussed in more detail. The chapter ends with a discussion of various daunting feasibility constraints that you are likely to encounter in trying to implement these EIP steps in the real world of practice.