Meyer et al.
Meyer, Wang, Li, Thomson, and O'Brien-Pallas (2009) used a convenience sample of nurses and patients from six Canadian hospitals. A convenience sample consists of participants that are drawn from sources using nonprobability sampling methods (Jackson, 2012). In this case hospitals with specific inclusion criteria were selected and case records were used. The study makes no mention of any type of random or stratified sampling outside the inclusion criteria for the hospital type (high volumes of patients in their cardiac units and certain case groups of interest).
In general there are two different types of sampling: random sampling methods and non-random sampling methods such as convenience sampling already discussed above. Random sampling methods allow researchers to extend the findings of the study beyond the sample of participants in the research study because these methods statistically control for differences in the sample and differences in the population from which the sample is drawn (Jackson, 2012). In a true random sampling method each and every member of the population from which the sample is drawn has an equal chance of being selected for the sample, whereas in nonrandom sampling method this is not true. The study looked at various subject variables...
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