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Exam (elaborations)

Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) Nursing Exam Bible – Complete Q&A with Ethical Frameworks & Implementation Models

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Master Evidence-Based Practice for your nursing finals or NCLEX prep! This guide includes verified A+ answers on ethical principles (Beneficence, Nonmaleficence, Autonomy, Justice), IOM quality dimensions, EBQI vs. research, and step-by-step implementation models. Ideal for nursing students, clinical educators, and healthcare leaders looking to integrate EBP into real-world practice. Pass with precision—guaranteed!

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Evidence Based Practice Final Actual Exam Newest Actual Exam
With Complete Questions And Correct Detailed Answers
(Verified Answers) |Already Graded A+




Define four core ethical principles that guide healthcare practice -
ANSWERS--1. Beneficence
2. Nonmaleficence
3. Autonomy
4. Justice


Beneficence - ANSWERS--Captures the importance of doing good for
patients


Nonmaleficence - ANSWERS--Addresses the importance of not
harming patients


Autonomy - ANSWERS--Acknowledges that patients have the right to
make decisions about their health, lives, and bodies


Justice - ANSWERS--Declares that resources should be distributed
fairly among people and without prejudice

,2|Page


Describe how the four core ethical principles can be seen as the
foundation for the Institute of Medicine's (IOM's) core dimensions of
quality - ANSWERS--Safety: nonmaleficence
Effectiveness: Benefience
Patient-centeredness: Autonomy
Timeliness: Beneficence and nonmaleficence
Equity: Justice
Efficiency: Beneficence and nonmaleficence


IOM Quality Dimensions - ANSWERS--Safety
Effectiveness
Patient-centeredness
Timeliness
Equity
Efficiency


Three examples of how EBP quality improvement initiatives could
conflict with ethical principles - ANSWERS--1. Attempts to improve
quality for some patients and may cause harm to others.
2. Strategies intended to improve quality that may turn out to be
ineffective and waste scarce resources
3. Activities declared to be quality improvement that may be more
accurately described as clinical research

,3|Page


Clinical research - ANSWERS--Activities involving direct interaction by
investigators with human subjects or material of human origin;
generates knowledge on which practice should be based


Patient participation viewed as optional. Aim is to generalize findings
to a population wider than research subjects. Aim to disseminate
findings for use outside of the organization.


Evidence-based quality improvement (EBQI) initiatives - ANSWERS--
Systematic, evidence-based activities designed to immediately
improve healthcare delivery in specific settings


All patients receive the same evidence-based intervention as part of
routine care. Aim is to improve care of patients in a specific
organization/setting. Aim is to provide internal data to practitioners
to guide further practice changes.


Similarities between EBQI and clinical research - ANSWERS--Involve
human participants


May use similar data collection procedures to evaluate outcomes
(e.g., surveys and physiological measurements)


Both may use the same data analysis methods to manage and
process data

, 4|Page


Ethical implications with EBQI and clinical research - ANSWERS--If
efforts are not made to improve quality through EBQI, principles of
beneficence and nonmaleficence may be violated


If EBQI does not offer the same treatment strategies to all patients,
then the principle of justice and autonomy may be violated,
especially if patient consent is not obtained.


Three ethical controversies related to EBQI initiatives - ANSWERS--1.
Should EBQIs require the same standards of patient consent as
clinical research?
2. Is it ethical to implement EBP in one setting while continuing with
traditional (and possibly substandard) practice in another?
3. Should informed consent be obtained from the patients receiving
traditional care?


Similarities and differences among research, EBP, and QI that have
implcations for human subjects review - ANSWERS--1. research is not
an integral part of routine clinical practice
2. EBQI is an integral part of the ongoing management of clinical care
delivery (EBP)
3. Research often carries risks for patients
4. Risks with EBQI activities are usually very low; sometimes the risks
may be greater if the EBQI activities are not implemented.
5. Generally, research is focused on generating evidence for practice,
whereas EBQI is focused on implementing evidence in practice

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Uploaded on
January 31, 2026
Number of pages
43
Written in
2025/2026
Type
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Contains
Questions & answers

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