RUA Group
NR449 Evidence-Based Practice
Matrix Table RUA: Analyzing Published Research
Evidence Matrix Table
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Article |
References |
Purpose Hypothesis Study Question(s) |
Study Variables |
Study Design |
Sample Size & Selection |
Data Collection Methods |
Major Finding(s) |
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1 (SAMPLE ARTICLE) |
Smith, L. (2013). What should I eat? A focus for those living with diabetes. Journal of Nursing Education, 1 (4) 111-112. |
How do educational support groups effect dietary modifications in patients with diabetes? |
D-Dietary modifications I-Education |
Qualitative |
N- 18 Convenience sample-selected from local support group in Pittsburgh, PA |
Focus Groups |
Support and education improved compliance with dietary modifications. |
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1-Abby |
Yanke, E., Moriarty, H., Carayon, P., & Safdar, N. (2021). “The Invisible Staff”: A qualitative analysis of environmental service workers’ perceptions of the VA Clostridium difficile prevention bundle using a human factors engineering approach. Journal of Patient Safety, 17(8), e806–e814. |
To explore environmental service workers’ perceptions of the barriers and facilitators that influence adherence to the Veterans Affairs C. difficile prevention bundle using the SEIPS human factors model. |
Qualitative themes, not variables |
Qualitative descriptive study using a focus group; SEIPS human factors engineering framework. |
N=7 Convenience sample Recruited from a single VA medical center |
60-minute focus groups audio recorded. |
-ESWs had strong knowledge of CDI hand hygiene requirements. -Barriers included inadequate space, difficulty enforcing visitor PPE adherence, interruptions while cleaning, and discomfort correcting physicians. -Facilitators included adequate supplies, supportive supervisors, clear cleaning protocols, and strong work ethic.
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2-Abby |
Banks, M., & Phillips, A. B. (2021). Evaluating the effect of automated hand hygiene technology on compliance and C. difficile rates in a long-term acute care hospital. American Journal of Infection Control, 49, 727–732 |
To evaluate whether implementing automated hand-hygiene monitoring technology increases staff compliance and reduces C. difficile infection rates in a long-term acute care hospital. |
Independent Variable: Introduction of automated hand-hygiene technology Dependent Variables: Hand Hygiene compliance, C. Diff infection incidence, |
Non-randomized pre/post intervention study (12 months pre-implementation vs. 12 months post-implementation). |
All clinical staff during study 3,778,830 monitor-captured Hand hygiene moments |
Automated sensor system results |
-Hand Hygiene compliance significantly increased from 89.82% to 97.10% - C. difficile incidence significantly decreased from 9.54 to 3.72 per period -Technology identified far more hand hygiene opportunities than traditional hand-audit observation. -Alcohol-based sanitizer consumption more than doubled.
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3 Lydia-Tilaciou |
Comparcini, D., Simonetti, V., Segala, F. V., Di Gennaro, F., Bavaro, D. F., Pompeo, M. A., Saracino, A., & Cicolini, G. (2023). Nurses’ knowledge, attitudes and practices on the management of Clostridioides difficile infection: A cross-sectional study. Antibiotics, 12(3), 529. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12030529
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To evaluate nurses’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding Clostridioides Difficile Infection management and prevention. Higher levels of Clostridioides Difficile Infection-related knowledge among nurses are associated with better infection-prevention practices. What are nurses’ knowledge levels, attitudes, and clinical practices related to Clostridioides Difficile Infection prevention and management?
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Independent Variable: Knowledge/attitudes. Dependent Variable: Infection-prevention clinical practices (including hand hygiene and contact precautions).
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Quantitative cross-sectional design.
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424 registered nurses recruited via convenience sampling from three hospitals in Italy.
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Self-administered online questionnaire assessing knowledge, attitudes, and practices; analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. |
Nurses demonstrated strong awareness of Clostridioides Difficile Infection risks but insufficient understanding of correct disinfection procedures and optimal hand hygiene timing. Higher knowledge scores were associated with significantly better infection-control practices (p < 0.05). Authors recommended targeted education programs to raise compliance and reduce Clostridioides Difficile Infection transmission. |
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4 Lydia-Tilacious |
Lev, V., Anbarchian, T., Yao, H., Bhat, A., Britt, P., & Shieh, L. (2024). Health care–associated Clostridioides difficile infection: Learning the perspectives of health care workers to build successful strategies. American Journal of Infection Control, 52(3), 284–292. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2023.08.008 |
To explore healthcare workers’ perspectives, barriers, and facilitators associated with preventing healthcare-associated C. difficile infections. Healthcare worker insights can guide the development of more effective Clostridioides Difficile Infection Prevention strategies. What barriers and facilitators do healthcare workers identify regarding Clostridioides Difficile Infection prevention efforts? |
Qualitative study — variables not isolated/quantified; themes included communication, environmental cleaning, hand hygiene, and workflow factors. |
Qualitative descriptive study using semi-structured interviews. |
45 healthcare workers (nurses, physicians, EVS, infection preventionists) recruited through purposive sampling in a large academic medical center. |
Audio-recorded interviews transcribed verbatim; thematic analysis conducted by two independent coders. |
Inconsistent hand hygiene, staffing shortages, unclear Clostridioides, Difficile Infection protocols, and insufficient interdepartmental communication were major barriers. Participants noted that reinforcing hand hygiene practices, improving workflow, and providing targeted education can reduce Clostridioides Difficile Infection rates. |
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5-Nicole |
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6-Nicole |
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7-Olivia |
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8-olivia |
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9-aissata |
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10-Aissata |
Kaushik, A., Beal, K., & Gupta, S. (2023, December). 689. Significant Improvement in Hand Hygiene Compliance and Decline in Clostridioides difficile Infections with Implementation of Infection Prevention Interventions. In Open Forum Infectious Diseases (Vol. 10, No. Supplement_2, pp. ofad500-751). US: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.751
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The purpose of the study was to evaluate the impact of a multifaceted infection prevention and control (IPC) intervention program on hand hygiene compliance and Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) rates in a tertiary care hospital. The hypothesis was that implementation of targeted IPC interventions would significantly improve hand hygiene adherence among healthcare personnel and reduce CDI incidence.
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· dardized Infection Ratio decreased from 1.14 to 0.4 (p < 0.01). implementation of a multifaceted IPC intervention improve hand hygiene compliance among healthcare personnel and decrease the rate of hospital-acquired C. difficile infections?
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11-tracEy |
Walte, C. (2022, December ). An interprofessional approach to reducing hospital-onset Clostridioides difficile infections. Retrieved from Science direct: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0196655322000967?utm_source=chatgpt.com
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The purpose is to evaluate different prevention strategies aimed at reducing the spread of C. difficile in a hospital setting |
Independent Variables: Daily mass hospital cleaning, cleaning programs, monitoring and performance
Dependent Variables: Onset C. difficle rates in the hospital, |
Quantitative
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Community Hospital with 410 beds |
Infection numbers were tracked through hospital records and ongoing monitoring |
Infection dropped to 63% after 1 year, and below 77% after 4 years. |
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12-tracEy |
Carling PC, O'Hara LM, Harris AD, Olmsted R. Mitigating hospital-onset Clostridioides difficile: The impact of an optimized environmental hygiene program in eight hospitals. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2023 Mar;44(3):440-446. doi: 10.1017/ice.2022.84. Epub 2022 Jun 20. PMID: 35718355; PMCID: PMC10015263. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10015263/?utm_source=chatgpt.com |
To explore the effects of an optimized environmental hygiene program on the spread of C. difficile across eight hospitals. |
Independent Variables: Daily mass hospital cleaning, cleaning programs, monitoring and performance
Dependent Variables: Onset C.difficle rates in the hospital, |
Quantitative |
8 acute-care hospitals in 6 states. Hospitals ranged in size from a 532-bed tertiary-care hospital to a 44-bed regional critical-access hospital (mean, 257 beds) |
Hospital records and labs. Cleaning audits and staff process monitoring of times (18 months) |
C. difficile infections dropped by about 50%, and cleaning quality improved when all 8 hospitals implemented the new cleaning program |
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