Background: The Advancing Research and Clinical practice through close Collaboration (ARCC) model postulates that improvement in nurses’ evidence-based practice (EBP) beliefs results in improved EBP implementation, which in turn improves nurse-related outcomes, such as nurses’ job satisfaction and group cohesion. However, there is a dearth of interventional studies that evaluate the relationships among these variables. Aims: This study evaluated whether a regional EBP fellowship program improved participants’ EBP beliefs, EBP implementation, job satisfaction, group cohesion, and group attractiveness, and examined the relationships among these improvements, using structural equation modeling. Methods: A pretest–posttest design was used among three annual cohorts of a regional, 9-month EBP fellowship program, from 2012 to 2014, in San Diego, California. Matched pretest and posttest questionnaires, including EBP Beliefs, EBP Implementation, Job Satisfaction, Group Cohesion, and Group Attractiveness scales, were analyzed (N = 120). Results: Paired t-tests showed statistically significant improvements in EBP beliefs, EBP implementation, job satisfaction, and group cohesion (p
CITATION STYLE
Kim, S. C., Ecoff, L., Brown, C. E., Gallo, A. M., Stichler, J. F., & Davidson, J. E. (2017). Benefits of a Regional Evidence-Based Practice Fellowship Program: A Test of the ARCC Model. Worldviews on Evidence-Based Nursing, 14(2), 90–98. https://doi.org/10.1111/wvn.12199
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