Paper Example Doctorate 1,256 words

Annotated bibliography: research sources and methods

Last reviewed: October 13, 2013 ~7 min read
Abstract

The paper is an annotated bibliography within the field of nursing. The specific topic of focus is the use of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT). The articles are both qualitative and quantitative. There are articles about HBOT as it specifically relates to the foot wounds and slow healing process of diabetic patients, while there is also mention of animal research subjects and human patients with condition other than diabetes that benefit from HBOT.

Nursing Annotated Bibliography

Nursing

Annotated Bibliography

Annotated Bibliography

This article categorizes diabetes as an epidemic that can responds well with the adjunctive treatment of HBOT. The authors use two clinical case studies in their literature review of how oxygen plays a part in the healing of lower extremity diabetic ulcers. They argue for the necessity of further study and research into HBOT because of its efficacy and the potential to drastically lower medical costs for diabetic patients, whose numbers continue to increase steadily. There is a very clear focus on the costs of diabetic treatments on a global scale in relation to the number of diabetic patients worldwide, as part of the authors' strategy to advocate the widespread use of HBOT. Charts and color photographs contextualized the text and make the research more concrete in the mind of the reader, especially the photographs of diabetic amputees who have not had HBOT.

Daly, M.C., & Faul, J. (2010). Hyperbaric Therapy as an adjunctive treatment for diabetic foot wounds. Wounds, 22(1), 1 -- 11.

These authors conducted the research into HBOT and diabetic foot ulcers themselves. They performed the study in Turkey. They admit to a number of independent variables among their 100 participants. Participants were 18 years of age and older, as well as had the presence of foot wounds for a minimum of four weeks. The wounds of the participants were classified using the Wagner scale. Their research concludes that HBOT statistically reduces the presence and persistence of foot wounds, as well as reduces the need for other treatments or amputation. There is also some comparison to the results the researchers gathered on human participants and to the results gathered by other researchers with animal participants.

Duzgun, MD, A.P., Satir, MD, H.Z., Ozozan, MD, O., Saylan, MD, B., Kulah, MD, B.K., and Coskun, MD, F. (2008). The Journal of Ankle & Foot Surgery, 47(6), 515 -- 519.

The authors of this article takes patients' perspectives into account with respect to HBOT. The authors noticed a gap in the research on HBOT in that up until the point of the article's publishing, there was no formal evaluation of high-technology-based treatments of diabetic patients. The authors contend that there is a substantial and impressive body of work about HBOT, there is nearly no evidence of research with primary focus upon the experience of the patient receiving HBOT. Theirs is a qualitative study of the patient experience. The researchers interviewed approximately 20 participants. The research concludes that HBOT diabetic patients rate communication from and between caregivers is the area of greatest lack.

Katarina, H., Magnus, L., Per, K., and Jan, A. (2009). Diabetic persons with foot ulcers and their perceptions of hyperbaric oxygen chamber therapy. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 18, 1975 -- 1985.

This is an article that provides a literature review regarding the use of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for diabetes patients, who have particular vulnerability to wounds of the lower limbs. In this literature review, there is evaluation of studies, as well as evaluation of criteria for treatment overall for patients. Key sections in the article include "Initiating HBOT," "Benefits of HBOT," and "Adverse Effects of HBOT." The author concludes that based on the research in the literature review, HBOT is an effective, non-invasive treatment with low risk of harmful side effects. The treatment's cost-benefit analysis is a part of the author's recommendation for HBOT, in terms of treatment and research. The author advocates advanced nurses are well versed in this treatment.

Kotsovos, A. (2012) The Use of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy for Wound Healing in People with Diabetes. The Journal of Diabetes Nursing, 16(6), 227 -- 232.

This is another literature review article regarding diabetes patients and HBOT. The specific focus of this article within this topic, is on foot ulcers that are a direct result of having diabetes. The research the literature review covers spans a period of years between 1966 -- 2012. The article provides a variety of precise statistical analyses. Each of the aspects analyzed is represented with texts as well as with graphic representations (flow charts, graphs, etc.). This article is a strong example of the quantitative research and assessment of HBOT for foot ulcers. This article would ground and complement the use of qualitative articles regarding HBOT and diabetic patients with foot ulcers. The authors conclude that HBOT is a worthwhile therapy in combating and healing diabetic foot ulcers. Based on their analysis performed and presented, the authors concur with the research in the literature review, specifically in that this therapy has low risk of adverse effects and dramatic improves the quality of life for the patient over the long-term.

Liu, PhD, R., Li, MD, L., Yang, MD, M., Boden, MD, G., and Yang, PhD, G. (20-13). Systematic Review of the Effectiveness of Hyperbaric Oxygenation Therapy in the Management of Chronic Diabetic Foot Ulcers. Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research, 88(2), 166 -- 175.

The author begins the article with a fairly detailed explanation of HBOT. The author later goes into specific detail as to the role of oxygen in the healing process. The full-color, high-resolution photographs of HBOT machinery underscore the strength of the text. This is a simply, yet effective strategy on the part of the author, to include photographs. The article is neither arguing for or against the use of HBOT, nor is the article arguing the validity of the use of such a treatment. The article describes and organizes the evidence for why HBOT is an effective treatment for various kinds of wounds. The article provides a list of medical conditions that HBOT has proven to ameliorate. Mills additionally includes evidence of the efficacy in animal patients as well as with human patients.

Mills, B.J. (2012) Wound healing: the evidence for hyperbaric oxygen therapy. British Journal of Nursing, 21(20), S28 -- S32.

The author provides a systematic review of all known evidence of the benefits of HBOT. The author argues that this treatment is most beneficial for diabetic patients with foot lesions and is the best course of action to significantly reduce amputation. There is other significant support for HBOT as a highly effective healing treatment.

Neal, M.S. (2001). Benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for diabetic foot lesions. Journal of Wound Care, 10(1), 507 -- 509.

You’re 81% through this paper. Sign up to read the full paper.

Sign Up Now — Instant Access Already a member? Log in
130,000+ paper examples AI writing assistant Citation generator Cancel anytime
References
8 sources cited in this paper
  • Daly, M.C., & Faul, J. (2010). Hyperbaric Therapy as an adjunctive treatment for diabetic foot wounds. Wounds, 22(1), 1 – 11.
  • Duzgun, MD, A.P., Satir, MD, H.Z., Ozozan, MD, O., Saylan, MD, B., Kulah, MD, B.K., and Coskun, MD, F. (2008). The Journal of Ankle & Foot Surgery, 47(6), 515 – 519.
  • Katarina, H., Magnus, L., Per, K., and Jan, A. (2009). Diabetic persons with foot ulcers and their perceptions of hyperbaric oxygen chamber therapy. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 18, 1975 – 1985.
  • Kotsovos, A. (2012) The Use of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy for Wound Healing in People with Diabetes. The Journal of Diabetes Nursing, 16(6), 227 – 232.
  • Liu, PhD, R., Li, MD, L., Yang, MD, M., Boden, MD, G., and Yang, PhD, G. (20 13). Systematic Review of the Effectiveness of Hyperbaric Oxygenation Therapy in the Management of Chronic Diabetic Foot Ulcers. Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research, 88(2), 166 – 175.
  • Mills, B.J. (2012) Wound healing: the evidence for hyperbaric oxygen therapy. British Journal of Nursing, 21(20), S28 – S32.
  • Neal, M.S. (2001). Benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for diabetic foot lesions. Journal of Wound Care, 10(1), 507 – 509.
  • Thom, MD, PhD, S.R., Milovanova, MD, PhD, T.N., Yang, MD, M., Bhopale, PhD, V.M., Sorokina, E.M., Uzun, MD, G., Malay, D.S., Troiano, M.A., Hardy, MD, K.R., Lambert, MD, D.S., Logue, MD, C.J., & Margolis, MD, PhD, D.J. (2011). Vasculonic stem cell mobilization and wound recruitment in diabetic patients: Increased cell number and intracellular regulatory protein content associated with hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Wound Rep Reg, 19(2011), 149 – 161.
Cite This Paper
PaperDue. (2013). Annotated bibliography: research sources and methods. PaperDue. https://www.paperdue.com/essay/nursing-annotated-bibliography-nursing-annotated-124493

Always verify citation format against your institution’s current style guide requirements.