From: Evidence based practice beliefs and implementation among nurses: a cross-sectional study
Subscales | Strongly agree/agree% |
---|---|
A) Beliefs related to knowledge: | 23.7 |
2. I am clear about the steps of EBP (36.2%). | |
3. I am sure that I can implement EBP (34.0%). | |
10. I am sure about how to measure the outcomes of clinical care (13.5%). | |
14. I know how to implement EBP sufficiently enough to make practice changes (12.0%). | |
15. I am confident about my ability to implement EBP where I work (23.0%). | |
B) Beliefs related to the value of EBP: | 71.8 |
1. I believe that EBP results in the best clinical care for patients (77.8%). | |
4. I believe that critically appraising evidence is an important step in the EBP process (79.0%). | |
5. I am sure that evidence-based guidelines can improve clinical care (86.0%). | |
9. I am sure that implementing EBP will improve the care that I deliver to my patients (72.0%). | |
16. I believe the care that I deliver is evidence-based (44.3%). | |
C) Beliefs related to resources: | 33.0 |
6. I believe that I can search for the best evidence to answer clinical questions in a time-efficient way (31.3%). | |
7. I believe that I can overcome barriers to implementing EBP (62.2%). | |
8. I am sure that I can implement EBP in a time-efficient way (24.3%). | |
12. I am sure that I can access the best resources in order to implement EBP (17.0%). | |
D) Beliefs to difficulty and time | Â |
11. I believe that EBP takes too much time. (reverse scored) (18.9%). | 22.5 |
13. I believe EBP is difficult (reverse scored) (17.3%). | Â |