Assessment Report:
Nursing Research in
Canada, 5th Edition
PART 0: THE NAVIGATOR
● Tier 1 (Questions 1–28) - Foundational Syntax & Application: Core definitions,
Tri-Council Policy Statement (TCPS 2) 2022/2025 updates, Canadian Nurses Association
(CNA) Code of Ethics (2025), and primary research paradigms.
● Tier 2 (Questions 29–58) - Complex Application & Simulation: Analytical
methodologies, statistical applications, qualitative rigour (Information Power), and
evidence-informed practice (EIP) frameworks (Iowa, Ottawa, i-PARIHS).
● Tier 3 (Questions 59–88) - Grandmaster Synthesis: High-stakes clinical scenarios,
advanced critical appraisal, and systems-level knowledge translation merging legislation
(e.g., Medical Assistance in Dying) with statistical and methodological realities.
PART I: THE PRIMER
Mastering this elite test bank translates directly to superior academic and professional
performance by bridging abstract theoretical research constructs with high-stakes, real-world
clinical decision-making. You will learn to dissect complex methodologies, navigate Canadian
ethical landscapes, and implement evidence using global best practices.
● Critical Axioms Cheat Sheet:
Framework / Concept Core Principle Current Global & Canadian
Standard
TCPS 2 (2022/2025) Updates Ethical conduct mandates Minimal-risk multi-site studies
broad consent and streamlined strongly encourage single
multi-jurisdictional review. Research Ethics Board (REB)
approval.
CNA Code of Ethics (2025) Integration of reconciliation, Explicit ethical guidance on
anti-racism, and nurse systemic inequities, harm
well-being. reduction, and psychologically
safe workplaces.
Information Power Sample size is dictated by Replaces generic data
study aim, specificity, theory, saturation in complex
dialogue, and analysis. qualitative designs; dense data
,Framework / Concept Core Principle Current Global & Canadian
Standard
requires fewer participants.
EIP Models Systematic translation of The Ottawa Model (OMRU)
knowledge to action (Iowa, requires pre-assessment of the
Ottawa, i-PARIHS). innovation, adopters, and
environment before
implementation.
MAiD Legislation High-stakes practice requiring Nurses humanize medicalized
obligation, precision, and events while navigating strict
delegation. legal boundaries and potential
conscientious objection.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Tier 1: Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: A research team initiates a multi-jurisdictional, minimal-risk observational study across three
Canadian provinces. To comply with the TCPS 2 (2022) updates, the team's FIRST action
regarding ethics approval is to: A) Submit full independent applications to every hospital's REB.
B) Utilize a single REB of record to streamline the ethics review. C) Bypass REB approval since
the study is strictly minimal risk. D) Obtain federal clearance from the Canadian Institutes of
Health Research.
● The Answer: B (Utilize a single REB of record to streamline the ethics review.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: TCPS 2 strongly encourages streamlining minimal-risk research to
avoid duplicate reviews.
○ C is incorrect: Minimal risk does not equate to exempt from REB review.
○ D is incorrect: Health research ethics remain locally or provincially governed, not
federally cleared first.
The Mentor's Analysis: The TCPS 2 updates specifically target the administrative burden of
multi-site studies by endorsing a single REB review model for minimal-risk data.
Professional/Academic Intuition: Duplicate ethics reviews for minimal-risk studies waste
resources; harmonize the approval.
Q2: A clinical researcher uses an AI Large Language Model to synthesize recent literature on
pediatric pain management. Under the parameters of modern academic integrity, the researcher
MUST independently verify the output to prevent: A) Social desirability bias B) Algorithmic
hallucinations and source fabrication C) Information power deficits D) Selection bias
● The Answer: B (Algorithmic hallucinations and source fabrication)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Relates to human participants altering survey responses.
○ C is incorrect: Applies to qualitative sample size sufficiency.
○ D is incorrect: A quantitative sampling error.
The Mentor's Analysis: Generative AI can create hyper-realistic but entirely fabricated citations
and data points. Researchers must trace every AI-generated claim back to primary,
peer-reviewed sources. Professional/Academic Intuition: Trust the AI's speed, but verify its
reality.
Q3: A public health nurse designs an intervention based on the 2025 CNA Code of Ethics.
, When addressing systemic barriers faced by marginalized populations accessing primary care,
the nurse is directly applying which newly emphasized foundational value? A) Beneficence B)
Reconciliation and anti-racism C) Autonomy D) Non-maleficence
● The Answer: B (Reconciliation and anti-racism)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: While beneficence is core, the 2025 update specifically targets
systemic inequities.
○ C is incorrect: Focuses on individual choice, not systemic barriers.
○ D is incorrect: Relates to doing no harm, not actively dismantling racist structures.
The Mentor's Analysis: The 2025 CNA Code of Ethics explicitly shifted focus to address the
impacts of colonization and systemic inequities through the lens of reconciliation.
Professional/Academic Intuition: Ethical nursing in Canada requires an active stance
against systemic oppression.
Q4: A researcher investigating Indigenous health outcomes partners with a First Nations
community. According to Dr. Evelyn Voyageur and Indigenous research methodologies, the
foundational requirement BEFORE data collection is: A) Establishing a directional hypothesis.
B) Ensuring randomized participant selection. C) Establishing relationality and community trust.
D) Securing federal grant funding.
● The Answer: C (Establishing relationality and community trust.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Imposes a Western deductive framework prematurely.
○ B is incorrect: Ignorant of community-based participatory structures.
○ D is incorrect: Funding is secondary to ethical community engagement.
The Mentor's Analysis: Indigenous methodologies center relationality—the understanding that
research must respect and honour the connection to the community, land, and history.
Professional/Academic Intuition: In Indigenous research, the relationship is the
methodology.
Q5: An evidence-informed practice (EIP) committee reviews a study aimed at mapping the
"lived experience" of patients recovering from severe burn injuries. This objective aligns MOST
closely with which qualitative tradition? A) Grounded Theory B) Phenomenology C)
Ethnography D) Time-series design
● The Answer: B (Phenomenology)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Maps a basic social process.
○ C is incorrect: Maps culture and group behaviours.
○ D is incorrect: A quantitative longitudinal design.
The Mentor's Analysis: Phenomenology seeks to uncover the deep, subjective essence of a
specific lived phenomenon from the patient's perspective. Professional/Academic Intuition:
Phenomenology asks "What is it like?"; Grounded Theory asks "How does it happen?"
Q6: A biobank requests permission to store patient tissue samples for future, currently
unspecified genetic research. Under TCPS 2 (2022) guidelines, the REB will permit this
provided the researchers obtain: A) Broad consent B) Retrospective consent C) Implied consent
D) Assent
● The Answer: A (Broad consent)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ B is incorrect: Cannot be obtained after the fact without prior agreement.
○ C is incorrect: Insufficient for the storage of human biological materials.
○ D is incorrect: Assent is for minors, not a substitute for explicit future permission.