NSG 6999 Week 5 Quiz
Question 1 (1 point)
There are three questions that should be asked for all studies.
One is “Will the results help me in caring for my patients?”
When looking at this question you are looking for:
Question 1 options:
Were the study patients similar to my own?
Were there appropriate numbers of patients studied?
Were data methods appropriate for the issue studied?
Were there steps to avoid bias or confounding?
Question 2 (1 point)
, When participants of a study are placed in groups based on
their wish to be in the study—or volunteers. This is a type of
Question 2 options:
Measurement bias
Selection bias
Recall bias
Information bias
Question 3 (1 point)
What is the definition of a systematic review?
Question 3 options:
A statistical approach to synthesizing the results of a number of studies that produces a larger sample si
and thus greater power to determine the true magnitude of an effect. Used to obtain a single-effect
measure of the results of all studies.
A research review that includes published papers that support an author’s particular point of view and
usually serves as a general background discussion of a particular issue. An explicit and systematic
Question 1 (1 point)
There are three questions that should be asked for all studies.
One is “Will the results help me in caring for my patients?”
When looking at this question you are looking for:
Question 1 options:
Were the study patients similar to my own?
Were there appropriate numbers of patients studied?
Were data methods appropriate for the issue studied?
Were there steps to avoid bias or confounding?
Question 2 (1 point)
, When participants of a study are placed in groups based on
their wish to be in the study—or volunteers. This is a type of
Question 2 options:
Measurement bias
Selection bias
Recall bias
Information bias
Question 3 (1 point)
What is the definition of a systematic review?
Question 3 options:
A statistical approach to synthesizing the results of a number of studies that produces a larger sample si
and thus greater power to determine the true magnitude of an effect. Used to obtain a single-effect
measure of the results of all studies.
A research review that includes published papers that support an author’s particular point of view and
usually serves as a general background discussion of a particular issue. An explicit and systematic