Dinámicas de información en profesionales de enfermería desde el análisis de redes sociales

  1. Martínez-Gimeno, Maria-Lara 1
  2. Ovalle-Perandones, Maria-Antonia 2
  3. Escobar-Aguilar, Gema 3
  4. Fernández-Martínez, Nélida 4
  5. Benítez- Andrades, Jose Alberto 5
  6. Marqués-Sánchez, Pilar 6
  1. 1 Fundación San Juan de Dios. Centro Universitario de Ciencias de la Salud San Rafael-Nebrija. Universidad Nebrija
  2. 2 Facultad de Ciencias de la Documentación. Departamento de Biblioteconomía y Documentación. Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Santísima Trinidad, 37, despacho 201, 28010 Madrid. España
  3. 3 Fundación San Juan de Dios. Centro de Ciencias de la Salud San Rafael-Nebrija. Universidad de Nebrija, Madrid, España
  4. 4 Departamento de Ciencias Biomédicas. Facultad de Veterinaria. Universidad de León. Campus of Vegazana s/n, León, 24071. España.
  5. 5 Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica y de Sistemas y Automática. Universidad de León, Campus de Vegazana s/n. León Grupo de Investigación SALBIS. Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad de León, Campus, s/n, 24401 Ponferrada. España.
  6. 6 Grupo de Investigación SALBIS. Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad de León, Campus, s/n, 24401 Ponferrada. España.
Revista:
Enfermería global: revista electrónica trimestral de enfermería

ISSN: 1695-6141

Ano de publicación: 2021

Volume: 20

Número: 3

Páxinas: 55-85

Tipo: Artigo

DOI: 10.6018/EGLOBAL.470721 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openDIGITUM editor

Outras publicacións en: Enfermería global: revista electrónica trimestral de enfermería

Resumo

Introduction: Knowledge is a necessary tool for scientific research and progress in any discipline. But scientific knowledge and information dynamics are not only sustained by individuals but are produced and maintained by groups of people working in the same environment where links and relationships can influence the process. Aim: To analyze the social networks of information source utilization, help/advice for knowledge transfer and the places where nursing professionals share information.Method: Analysis of social networks through a validated questionnaire. Professionals from 6 hospital units were recruited.Results: 77 professionals participated with a mean age of 42.9 (SD:11.48). Peers were the most frequently used source of information (76 choices) compared to databases and scientific articles, which were the least selected (63 choices). Horizontal homophilous networks (professionals with similar status/interests) are the most frequent for obtaining information on research results (74 choices). The care unit is the most pointed environment for sharing information (50 choices).Conclusions: Professionals consider the knowledge of their peers as the main source for obtaining information on research results. Units with a certain degree of specialization use clinical practice guidelines and protocols as the main source of information. Nursing professionals use homophilic-horizontal networks to obtain information. The work environment in its different settings (unit, office, meetings) is the most used for sharing information on research results.

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