• Am. J. Crit. Care · Nov 2020

    Physician and Nurse Research in Multidisciplinary Intensive Care Units.

    • Kevin B Laupland and Fiona Coyer.
    • Kevin B. Laupland is an intensivist, Intensive Care Services, at Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, and a professor at the School of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Health, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
    • Am. J. Crit. Care. 2020 Nov 1; 29 (6): 450-457.

    BackgroundAlthough clinical care is multidisciplinary, intensive care unit research commonly focuses on single-discipline themes. We sought to characterize intensive care unit research conducted by physicians and nurses.MethodsOne hundred randomly selected reports of clinical studies published in critical care medical and nursing journals were reviewed.ResultsOf the 100 articles reviewed, 50 were published in medical journals and 50 were published in nursing journals. Only 1 medical study (2%) used qualitative methods, compared with 9 nursing studies (18%) (P = .02). The distribution of quantitative study designs differed between medical and nursing journals (P < .001), with medical journals having a predominance of cohort studies (29 articles [58%]). Compared with medical journal articles, nursing journal articles had significantly fewer authors (median [interquartile range], 5 [3-6] vs 8 [6-10]; P < .001) and study participants (94 [51-237] vs 375 [86-4183]; P < .001) and a significantly lower proportion of male study participants (55% [26%-65%] vs 60% [51%-65%]; P = .02). Studies published in medical journals were much more likely than those published in nursing journals to exclusively involve patients as participants (47 [94%] vs 25 [50%]; P < .001). Coauthorship between physicians and nurses was evident in 14 articles (14%), with infrequent inclusion of authors from other health care disciplines.ConclusionsPhysician research and nurse research differ in several important aspects and tend to occur within silos. Increased interprofessional collaboration is possible and worthwhile.©2020 American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.

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