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Nursing Resources

Your One-Stop Guide for Information AND Research Resources for Nursing Students at FSU!

What an Integrative Review is

 

"An integrative review is a specific review method that summarizes past empirical or theoretical literature to provide a more comprehensive understanding of a particular phenomenon or healthcare problem (Broome 1993). Integrative reviews, thus, have the potential to build nursing science, informing research, practice, and policy initiatives. Well-done integrative reviews present the state of the science, contribute to theory development, and have direct applicability to practice and policy."
- Robin Whittemore and Kathleen Knafl

 

That said, care must be taken due to the possibility of increased (general) bias being present in Integrative Reviews due to the addition of study types considered to have less rigorous methodologies.  (But, that said, don't let perfection be the enemy of the good!)

 

Database Search Tips for Nurses Doing Capstones

 

Combine multiple keywords
  • Write out your Capstone topic as a sentence and pull out the words that most identify your topic / research question  - the keywords - or use a PICO form to help you clarify your topic's keywords
  • Search with keywords in the advanced search area of RamSearch or individual databases
  • Put one keyword per search box (more boxes can be added) before running the search
Look at your initial keywords, then check for synonyms and other alternative words for the concepts
  • Look at your keywords and see if there are synonyms for a word / concept you already have - consider common names, more scientific terms, and nursing 'jargon'
  • You will come across alternate keywords during your initial searches: In article titles, in the abstract, in the 'subjects' or 'subject terms' that many databases list next to results - save them and try them
  • New techniques, new issues, new developments in the field can mean that you will find several alternate terms or expressions in the literature, because one way of expressing a concept hasn't 'won out' and become the 'norm' yet - also, nursing 'jargon' can vary by country, region, and even be unique to a hospital system, so don't limit yourself to the most familiar term you know, without checking for others
  • The best way to search using synonyms in a database: use the advanced interface, and type the first version of your keyword in one box...a space, then type capital OR, space, then type the next synonym in the same box, space, an OR, space, the next synonym, a space, etc....until they're all in that one search box, then add the other keywords in the other search boxes, then run your search
Your topic keywords may include acronyms that denote a phrase, but beware...
  • An acronym can be used in more than one discipline, but meaning something different in each one!
Sure, you generally want 'recent' literature, but...
  • Don't be surprised if it turns out that the subject of your Capstone resurfaces as a topic of current interest in the field from time to time - so if there's not much very recent around about your topic, look a little further back before giving up on it
Sure, you'd rather have your search results be all full-text...
  • But if you choose the full text only limiter, you may miss out on ways that our system can get the full-text for you from one of our databases
Sure, you'd probably prefer to focus on nursing topics / issues occurring in the United States, but...
  • Sometimes nursing education or management issues are researched in other parts of the world, and possibly at a different time period than here in the U.S. - so unless your Capstone must be only U.S.-focused, you may find relevant research has been done elsewhere, like Asia or the EU
Remember, Databases aren't searched the way that Google searches the internet
  • A database's search function doesn't normally search through every word on every record (in this case, articles) for your keywords...they search each record's fields (those being the way that databases label / organize their content) - so while in advanced search, you'll see a way, just to the right of the search boxes, to pick one of the fields to check for your keywords in - if you're getting too many results, picking a field (like abstract or title) can help limit your results
Sooner or later you'll need to get articles via interlibrary loan
  • No charge to you; takes a few days but usually not that long, but remember that our ILL Dept. isn't open on the weekends - request forms are processed Mondays through Fridays only
  • You will get in your e-mail a link and password to retrieve a PDF
RamSearch doesn't have a 'choose the type of study you want' limiter
  • But the individual Health Science databases will have additional limiters, like study types (and other specific limits of interest to health care professionals)
  • When using RamSearch, simply add the name of the type of study you'd like as one of your keywords to get more studies in your results
  • One reason RamSearch can be useful for graduate students is because it searches (almost) all our databases at once - so useful for interdisciplinary topics!
  • RamSearch does, of course, have a way to limit results to peer-reviewed (as do our other databases)

PRISMA: Documenting your Capstone Literature Search

Although the PRISMA literature search reporting / documenting system was created (2009, updated 2020) for Systematic Reviews, researchers writing Integrative Reviews use it, too (with some modifications).

How to Manage Your Citations During a Nursing Department Capstone Project

 

A Capstone is a substantial Literature Review; we at the Whittemore Library recommend that you use Zotero to store both your citations, and the PDFs or screen-shots of sources you are saving for your capstone.

Zotero is a free, open source citation management app.

  • Download and install Zotero.
  • After that, you will have a desktop app icon (Looks like: The zotero icon: a red letter Z)
  • Also download and install the connector (if available) for your browser
    • Available for: Chrome, Firefox, or Safari
    • When the connector is installed, you will have a little icon (page, PDF or folder) on the upper right side
    • While looking for articles, you can click on that icon to add articles to your open Zotero app
  • You should have a plug-in, appearing as a new tab, in your Microsoft word app
    • This plug-in lets you add parenthetical citations with a click, and create/update your list of References at the end of your paper.

For all the details on installing and using Zotero, see our Zotero Help Guide.

Sources used on this page:

 

Demiris, G., Oliver, D. P., & Washington, K. T. (2019). Chapter 3—Defining and Analyzing the Problem. In G. Demiris, D. P. Oliver, & K. T. Washington (Eds.), Behavioral Intervention Research in Hospice and Palliative Care (pp. 27–39). Academic Press. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-814449-7.00003-X

Uman, L. S. (2011). Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses. Journal of the Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 20(1), 57–59.

Whittemore, R., & Knafl, K. (2005). The integrative review: Updated methodology. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 52(5), 546–553. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2648.2005.03621.x