Obstacles, difficulties, and facilitators in setting up a research project funded by the Hospital Program for Nursing and Paramedical Research: Lessons learned from a mental health research project

Varia
By Mickaël Mastracci, Bilitys Simon, Ludovic Serna, Pierrette Estingoy, Annick Perrin-Niquet, Jacques Bagur, Annick Bechet
English

Nursing research continues to grow and become self-sustaining. It was in this context that we received funding from the Hospital Program for Nursing and Paramedical Research for our research project on schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is a mental disorder that affects 1% of the general population, and is a crippling disease both cognitively and socially. Cognitive remediation and therapeutic education are nursing practices deemed suitable for the psychosocial rehabilitation of schizophrenia patients. We hypothesized that a therapeutic education program placed upstream of cognitive remediation would have beneficial effects. We planned to include eighty patients aged eighteen to sixty, randomized into two groups, one combining cognitive remediation and therapeutic education, the second using just cognitive remediation. Each patient was assessed using a range of neuropsychological scales. Due to difficulties encountered in including and following up with participants, our statistical results could not be used. We therefore turned our focus to the factors that facilitate and hinder the setting up of a nursing research project. We organized these factors into three areas: those related to the nurse; those related to the care facility and the organization; and those related to the research. The results were consistent with the literature and show how important it is to encourage nurses to be more involved in a scientific approach.

  • schizophrenia
  • therapeutic patient education
  • cognitive remediation
  • quality of life
  • nursing care
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