identify and justify the kind of information (qualitative, quantitative, or mixed) that you believe would be most appropriate for determining the effectiveness medical error intervention.
Medical errors are the mistakes done in the healthcare sector by the healthcare professionals due to varied reasons.It can be either intentional or unintentional errors.The intervention to correct this depends on the number(quantity)of errors and its intensity (quality) of errors happened.For instance when a there is a medication error in the unit, the intervention depends on the number of patients affected and the adverse reactions to each patient has to be addressed. Hence to get an effective medical error intervention mixed information is best.
identify and justify the kind of information (qualitative, quantitative, or mixed) that you believe would be most approp...
Please explain how you would process data using a mixed method approach (qualitative and quantitative) for analysis and presentation of the study?
Which qualitative method(s) do you believe would be ideally suited to use at each stage of the planning and evaluation cycle? Justify your answer.
a) Which type of forecasting approach, qualitative or quantitative, is better? Discuss, explain and justify your affirmation. b) Discuss how you would manage a poor forecast. Weekly sales of the Weber food processor for the past 10 weeks have been as follows: Week Sales Week 980 Sales 990 1030 1040 1120 1260 9 1050 960 1240 1 100 10 , a. Determine, on the basis of minimizing the mean square error, whether a three-or four-period simple moving average model gives...
What are the key differences between quantitative and qualitative research? Why would you choose to develop a research project that is quantitative instead of qualitative, or vice versa? What are some considerations to be made when deciding between quantitative and qualitative research?
identify a current promotional campaign that you believe is effective. Justify your choices with detailed examples of how the campaign addresses most or all of the stages of the AIDA model
If you are doing a qualitative study or a quantitative study, how do the variables or phenomenon addressed in your study inform the method, design, research questions, and data collection instrument to be used? What are two instruments that might be used to gather data for your study? Why do you believe these instruments will gather the appropriate data to answer the research questions and address the problem?
What is the difference between a quantitative and qualitative research article? How can you quickly identify the difference between the two when reading a nursing research article?
Select one qualitative and one quantitative question that you are interested in investigating. Identify the independent and dependent variables. Next, create a hypothesis or set of hypotheses to go along with your research question. Identify your hypothesis as one of each of the four categories below and explain why your hypothesis fits into these categories (hint: review chapter 3). Associative or causal Simple or complex Nondirectional vs. directional Null vs. research
Identify one medication error you believe is one of the most common in detail, the impact it has on staff, organization, health care patient, specific risks to patient and what can be done to prevent this error.
What are some situations in which you would use quantitative data? What about qualitative data?