Translating Evidence into Practice at the End-of-Life: Information needs, access and usage by hospice and palliative nurses

J Hosp Palliat Nurs. 2015 Feb;17(1):24-30. doi: 10.1097/NJH.0000000000000117.

Abstract

Information literacy is important for evidence-based nursing and quality patient care. Hospice/palliative nurses are often unaffiliated with academic institutions and may experience barriers accessing information. The project's goals were to identify their (1) access to evidence-based resources, (2) information literacy skills and (3) training needs. The research design was a descriptive assessment. Members of the Hospice & Palliative Nurses Association in 4 states received the assessment in collaboration with University of Pittsburgh. The methodology yielded statistics on information needs, access and literacy skills. Data analysis included frequency distributions, cross-tabulations, and a chi-square test. Of the respondents, 69% worked clinically. The need for drug or disease information occurred in 89% to 100% of respondents across sites. Respondents knew of PubMed in 28% to 70% of sites. Evidence databases were unavailable in 7% to 39% of settings. The most frequent source of information was colleagues (74%), followed by Internet searches (70%). About 43% of respondents felt confident using health literacy strategies. The greatest training needs were finding quality nursing information (79%), reliable patient education (65%) and evidence for practice/quality improvement (64%). There is a large need for quality nursing, patient and evidence-based information in hospice environments. Hospice nurses access the Internet, although evidence/database access is often lacking or unknown making it suboptimal.