Research is essential to provide effective, safe and up to date care for patients. Deborah Goodall and colleagues consider ways to develop successful searches
Nurses at all stages of their careers can develop evidence-based practice through reviewing the literature to identify the best available evidence. This is not always a straightforward process. The systematic review seeks to draw together all known knowledge on a topic but the findings are not always helpful to practitioners and may contradict clinical experience or not fully address the topic. Approaches to unravelling complex issues, such as realist research or realist evaluation, are time-consuming and difficult to incorporate into daily clinical practice.
It is possible to produce a credible and useful literature review by drawing on specialist library and information staff, and adopting a pragmatic but balanced approach. Narrative synthesis is one approach that can be adopted.
Cancer Nursing Practice. 12, 3, 31-35. doi: 10.7748/cnp2013.04.12.3.31.e919
Correspondencegwen.marples@northumbria.ac.uk
Peer reviewThis article has been subject to double blind peer review
Conflict of interestNone declared
Received: 28 September 2012
Accepted: 17 January 2013
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