Nursing Schedules, Patient Outcomes
The title of this article suffices, although it could stand some improvement to make it even better. It certainly identifies the pivotal variables elucidated within this study, which include nursing scheduling, staffing, and patient morality. It is succinct enough. However, it does not allude to the study population at all. There is also a slight degree of redundancy in the title, as the focus of the research is more on the schedule concerns for nurses than for staffing in general.
The abstract is probably one of the better features of this research study and its ensuing write-up. It certainly is concise in its summary of the primary features of the report. It is also detailed in that it provides the problem, methods used, results, and conclusions -- although it does not not necessarily deploy those particular terms in doing so. It provides a high level synthesis of the issues the original research in this article illustrates.
Problem Statement Clarity
The problem is stated without ambiguity in this research document. Specifically, the problem is that there was (prior to the conducting of research in this article) a paucity of empirical evidence correlating to arduous nursing schedules to patient outcomes (Trinkoff et al., 2011, p. 1). The authors allude to this fact early and often, begin with a statement to this...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now