A Podiatrist's Guide to Using Research
Ian Mathieson, Dominic Upton
Published: 2008
Pages: 184
A Podiatrist's Guide to Using Research gives practical and jargon-free guidance for practitioners looking to understand, critique and use research to underpin their clinical decision-making. The authors explore the principles and methods used by the active researcher to help consumers of research develop the skills they need to approach and constructively use the extensive data available to consolidate and develop their own practice.With a demystifying and down-to-earth approach throughout, this book: . examines the mechanics and principles of literature searches and how to formulate appropriate questions to guide searching and extract relevant information . looks at systems of critical appraisal . discusses research methods in a focussed discussion that uses case studies as examples . explores how the resulting enhanced appraisal and understanding can inform changes in practice . considers the rationale for change and how informed and reasoned change in practice can be measured to monitor outcomesFor podiatrists and healthcare practitioners, A Podiatrist's Guide to Using Research will make research clinically relevant to everyday practice.For podiatrists and healthcare practitioners, A Podiatrist's Guide to Using Research will make research clinically relevant to everyday practice.
- Integrative approach gives an understanding of research methodology in the context of the requirements of evidence-based practice
- Practical and jargon-free approach demystifies research
- Many 'key point' boxes and case studies contribute to ease of understanding
- Examples from a variety of different health professions
- Frequent links to contemporary literature