Reply to 2
posts 1st post Discussion - Week 4 COLLAPSE Levels of Measurement Research
Question: Will sexually transmitted infections (STIs) education increase
knowledge and disease prevention practices for young adults ages 18-24 years
after discussion and at four weeks of follow-up? Identification of Variables
Dependent Variables The dependent variables will be participant recruitment,
knowledge of STIs, and prevention techniques. Participant recruitment will be
conducted at a local wellness clinic that test and treat STIs. The second
variable STI knowledge will test pre and post-intervention using the sexually
transmitted disease knowledge questionnaire (STD-KQ). Participants will receive
a score of 0-27 based on responses to the questionnaire. Independent Variables
The independent variables will be demographic differences (gender, age,
ethnicity) in STD knowledge scores. Levels of Measurement Several measurement
tools can be used
Reply 1
Your discussion post is empowering as the research question seeks to mitigate the prevalence of sexually transmitted infections in young adults. The use of statistical analysis is also commendable due to the various advantages it offers. Besides providing reliable, verifiable quantification of the collected data, statistical analysis enables one to gain valuable insights, which can help reveal associations between dependent and independent variables and make reliable recommendations based on the data (Sforza et al., 2020). Using the appropriate statistical methods is vital in getting correct conclusions from the data, enabling accurate predictions (Sforza et al., 2020). Due to the increasing importance of opinions and decisions that data can support, it is crucial to critically evaluate the quality of one’s analysis before presenting it to the relevant stakeholders.
Regards.
References
Sforza, M., Okhiria, R., & Okhiria, T. (2020). Diving deep: The importance of in-depth statistical analysis in medical research. Journal of Surgery and Research, 03(03). https://doi.org/10.26502/jsr.10020085
Reply 2
Despite existing antibiotic treatments, surgical site infections remain a significant cause of mortality, morbidity, and hospital readmissions after surgery. As such, your discussion post is commendable as it aims to seek the relationship between surgical site infections and HbA1c, enabling better planning of interventions. I agree that correctly assigning an surgical site infection to elevated blood sugar would be difficult due to the other reasons that a patient could contract the infection (Hassan et al., 2020). Risk factors for contracting these infections include; surgery lasting at least 2 hours, existing comorbidities, old age, overweight, weak immune system, cancer, and having emergency surgery (Hassan et al., 2020). Fortunately, surgical site infections are preventable; hence the importance of this study in finding ways to mitigate this issue.
Regards.
References
Hassan, R., Osman, S., Aabdeen, M., Mohamed, W.,
Hassan, R., & Mohamed, S. (2020). Incidence and root causes of surgical
site infections after gastrointestinal surgery at a public teaching hospital in
Sudan. Patient Safety in Surgery, 14(1).
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13037-020-00272-4