100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

Solution Manual for Statistics for Nursing Research A Workbook for Evidence-Based Practice 3rd Edition Susan Grove Daisha

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
84
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
01-09-2025
Written in
2025/2026

Solution Manual for Statistics for Nursing Research A Workbook for Evidence-Based Practice 3rd Edition Susan Grove Daisha

Institution
Statistics For Nursing
Course
Statistics for Nursing











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Statistics for Nursing
Course
Statistics for Nursing

Document information

Uploaded on
September 1, 2025
Number of pages
84
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

Solution Manual for
Statistics for Nursing
Research A Workbook
for Evidence-Based
Practice 3rd Edition
Susan Grove Daisha

,Answer Guidelines for Questions to Be Graded

EXERCISE
Identifying Levels of
Measurement: Nominal,
Ordinal, Interval, and Ratio
1

The questions are in bold followed by answers.

1. In Table 1, identify the level of measurement for the current therapy variable. Provide a
rationale for your answer.
Answer: The current therapy variable was measured at the nominal level. These drug categories
were probably developed to be exhaustive for this study and included the categories of drugs the
subjects were receiving. However, the categories are not exclusive, since patients are usually on
more than one category of these drugs to manage their health problems. The current therapies
are not measured at the ordinal level because they cannot be rank ordered, since no drug category
can be considered more or less beneficial than another drug category (see Figure 1-1; Grove &
Gray, 2019).

2. What is the mode for the current therapy variable in this study? Provide a rationale for
your answer.
Answer: The mode for current therapy was β blocker. A total of 100 (94%) of the cardiac patients
were receiving this category of drug, which was the most common prescribed drug for this
sample.

3. What statistics were conducted to describe the BMI of the cardiac patients in this sample?
Discuss whether these analysis techniques were appropriate or inappropriate.
Answer: BMI was described with a mean and standard deviation (SD). BMI measurement resulted
in ratio-level data with continuous values and an absolute zero (Stone & Frazier, 2017). Ratio-
level data should be analyzed with parametric statistics such as the mean and SD (Grove & Gray,
2017; Knapp, 2017).

4. Researchers used the following item to measure registered nurses’ (RNs) income in a study:
What category identifies your current income as an RN?
a. Less than $50,000
b. $50,000 to 59,999
c. $60,000 to 69,999
d. $70,000 to 80,000
e. $80,000 or greater

What level of measurement is this income variable? Does the income variable follow the
rules outlined in Figure 1-1? Provide a rationale for your answer.
Answer: In this example, the income variable is measured at the ordinal level. The income catego-
ries are exhaustive, ranging from less than $50,000 to greater than $80,000. The two open-ended

AG 1-1

,AG 1-2 Answer Guidelines for Questions to Be Graded


categories ensure that all salary levels are covered. The categories are not exclusive, since catego-
ries (d) and (e) include an $80,000 salary, so study participants making $80,000 might mark
either (d) or (e) or both categories, resulting in erroneous data. Category (e) could be changed
to greater than $80,000, making the categories exclusive. The categories can be rank ordered
from the lowest salary to the highest salary, which is consistent with ordinal data (Grove &
Gray, 2019; Waltz et al., 2017).

5. What level of measurement is the CDS score? Provide a rationale for your answer.
Answer: The CDS score is at the interval level of measurement. The CDS is a 26-item Likert
scale developed to measure depression in cardiac patients. Study participants rated their symp-
toms on a scale of 1 to 7, with higher numbers indicating increased severity in the depression
symptoms. The total scores for each subject obtained from this multi-item scale are considered
to be at the interval level of measurement (Gray et al., 2017; Waltz et al., 2017).

6. Were nonparametric or parametric analysis techniques used to analyze the CDS scores for
the cardiac patients in this study? Provide a rationale for your answer.
Answer: Parametric statistics, such as mean and SD, were conducted to describe CDS scores
for study participants (see Table 1). CDS scores are interval-level data as indicated in Questions 5,
so parametric statistics are appropriate for this level of data (Gray et al., 2017; Kim & Mallory,
2017).

7. Is the prevalence of depression linked to the NYHA class? Discuss the clinical importance
of this result.
Answer: fThe fstudy fnarrative findicated fthat fthe fprevalence fof fdepression fincreased fwith fthe
fgreater fNYHA fclass. fIn fNYHA fclass fIII, f64% fof fthe fsubjects fwere fdepressed, fwhereas f11%
fof fthe fsubjects fwere fdepressed fin fNYHA fclass fI. fThus, fas fthe fNYHA fclass fincreased, fthe
fnumber fof fsub- fjects fwith fdepression fincreased. fThis fis fan fexpected ffinding fbecause fas fthe
fNYHA fclass fincreases, fcardiac fpatients fhave fmore fsevere fphysical fsymptoms, fwhich fusually
fresult fin femotional fdistress, fsuch f as f depression. f Nurses f need f to f actively f assess f cardiac
f patients f for f depression, f especially f those fin fhigher fNYHA fclasses, fso fthey fmight fbe
fdiagnosed fand ftreated fas fneeded.


8. What ffrequency fand fpercent fof fcardiac fpatients fin fthis fstudy fwere fnot fbeing ftreated
fwith fan fantidepressant? fShow fyour fcalculations fand fround fyour fanswer fto fthe
fnearest fwhole fpercent f(%).
Answer: fA ftotal f fof f f106 f fcardiac f fpatients f fparticipated f fin f fthis f fstudy. f fThe f fsample f
fincluded f15 fpatients fwho fwere freceiving fan fantidepressant f(see fTable f1). fThe f fnumber f
fof f fcardiac fpatients f not f treated f for f depression f was f 91 f (106 f – f 15 f = f91). f The f group
f percent f is f calculated fby f the f following f formula: f (group f frequency f ÷ f total f sample
f size) f × f 100%. f For f this f study, f(91 fpatients f÷ f106 fsample fsize) f× f100% f= f0.858 f×
f100% f= f85.8% f= f86%. fThe f ffinal fanswer f is f rounded f to f the f nearest f whole f percent
f as f directed f in f the f question. f You f could f have falso fsubtracted fthe f14% fof fpatients
ftreated fwith fantidepressants ffrom f100% fand fobtained fthe f86% f who f were f not f treated f with
f an f antidepressant.


9. What fwas fthe fpurpose fof fthe f6-minute fwalk ftest f(6MWT)? fWould fthe f6MWT fbe
fuseful fin fclinical fpractice?
Answer: fHa fet fal. f(2018) fstated, f“The f6-min fwalk ftest f(6MWT) fis fa fmeasure fof fthe
fsubmaximal, fsteady-state ffunctional fcapacity” fof fcardiac fpatients. fThis ftest fwould fbe fa
fquick, feasy fway fto fdetermine fa fcardiac fpatient’s ffunctional fstatus fin fa fclinical f fsetting. f
fThis f ffunctional f fstatus fscore f could f be f used f to f determine f the f treatment f plan f to
f promote f or f maintain f functional f statusfof fcardiac fpatients.

, Answer f Guidelines f for f Questions f to f Be f Graded AG f1-3


10. How fwas fexercise fconfidence fmeasured fin fthis fstudy? fWhat fwas fthe flevel fof
fmeasurement ffor fthe fexercise fconfidence fvariable fin fthis fstudy? fProvide fa frationale
ffor fyour fanswer. fAnswer: fExercise fconfidence fof fthe fpatients fwith fheart ffailure f(HF) fin
fthis fstudy fwas fmeasuredfwith fthe fExercise fConfidence fScale fthat fincluded ffour fsubscales
ffocused fon fwalking, fclimbing,flifting f objects f of f graded f weight, f and f running f (see f the
f study f narrative). f This f was f a f rating f scalefwith fvalues franging ffrom f0 fto f100. fThe
fpatients’ fscores ffor fthe fTotal fExercise fConfidence fscalefand f the f subscales f were
f considered f interval-level f data f and f analyzed f with f parametric f statistics,fsuch fas fmeans fand
fSDs f(see fthe fstudy fnarrative; fWaltz fet fal., f2017).

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
Tush3161 Chamberlain School Of Nursing
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
74
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
14
Documents
1870
Last sold
1 week ago
Nursing Test Banks and Solution manuals

My carefully curated materials are designed to help students study smarter, prepare with confidence, and succeed in their exams. With a strong focus on accuracy and up-to-date content, we ensure that each test bank meets academic standards and supports your educational goals. You can also reach me through jtutor018atgmaildotcom. I am a specialist in NCLEX BOTH RN and PN, also i provide other nursing materials

Read more Read less
5.0

149 reviews

5
147
4
0
3
1
2
0
1
1

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions