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HCR 593-Module 5


HCR 593-Module 5

Where is your study taking place? You will need to place it within its geographic setting as well as  local ( such as a facility or organization).
Provide enough background information about the setting so the reader understands the context in which the study or problem is taking place.
Details can include:
  • Population demographics
  • Socioeconomic factors
  • Environmental factors
  • Cultural factors.

If you are doing a quality -improvement project, include all of the facility or organization information that the reader needs to understand the problem. This may include a description of the organizational culture in addition information related to:

  • Administration
  • Management
  • Leadership structures
  • Financial data
  • Staffing
  • Involved populations, such as patients.

Anything that could  influence the implementation or outcomes of your project, for better or worse, should be discussed.

Module 5: Producing the Applied Project: Sample Population

  • What population are you drawing your sample from?
  • Who is going to participate in your study or project?
  • How many participants do you need? Is there a minimum?
  • How are you going to get them?

You need to first look at the type  of  sample design you are going to use ( convenience, purposive, random, consecutive) and why you chose that design.

Next, you need to establish your  sampling frame (the general population from which you will recruit your participants).  Example: For a study of bereaved parents of estranged children, the sampling frame might be parents attending a grief support group in a particular region of the United States.

Then you must tell us who you want to recruit from that population.

You need to specify exactly who qualifies to participate

  • Develop inclusion and exclusion criteria (I/E)
  • Characteristics for I/E  may include
    • Demographics (age, sex, educational level, marital status, ethnicity, occupation)
    • Presence or absence of an illness or health condition
    • Duration of illness or health condition
    • Number of years phenomenon being  experience
  • Professional role
  • Primary language
  • Literacy
  • Previous experience with intervention
  • Location

Example

The study will include a purposive sample of women in western Uganda who have experienced obstetric fistula. Inclusion criteria are women 18 years of age and older with a vesicovaginal or rectovaginal fistula  secondary to prolonged obstructed labor. Exclusion criteria will be women who have had their fistula for longer than five years so that the data reflect current sociocultural norms.

Module 5: Bias in Research

As you develop your project, take time to see if you have identified any potential “bias” in your approach, in your population, and in your analysis. How will you approach bias that you identify.

Resources: Bias in Research.pdf– attached file
 YouTube Video:  Dr. Todd Grande Bias in ResearchLinks to an external site.https://youtu.be/isYbwZzj_T0?si=6FRhofcmxTp2ERt-
This video discusses the concept of bias in research. Bias is evident when researching an issue that is polarizing or when financial gain is at stake. Even without these elements, bias exists in research because of other factors including researchers wanting a particular result to occur.
Every project contains some level of bias. It is our responsibility as the researcher to identify and limit bias.

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