Project Evaluation
The best way to establish whether my project on hand hygiene and infection control made a difference in practice is through measuring the usefulness and effectiveness of the proposed intervention. In order for a project to make a difference in practice, it should result in positive outcomes that only promotes wellness but also encourages health superiority in general (Heavey, 2015). This change will, therefore, be evaluated with the utilization of clinical significance assessment. In that, the outcomes usefulness of hand hygiene in controlling infections should correlate with the goal of creating health wellness. Given that the issue of hygiene is very relevant today as a major strategy for controlling infections if the intervention generates positive results this will, therefore, imply that the project made a positive change in health practice. In that, the change will be assesses based on its contribution or the general outcome after the application of the proposed intervention.
Statistical significance refers to the quantification of whether the findings of a statistical evaluation meet the predetermined measurement level which is regarded as p-value (Satake, 2015). Statistical significance helps in the exploration of the existing group's differences quantitatively forum a given population sample (Satake, 2015). On the other hand, clinical significance relates to whether an observed effect is significant in ailment treatment, diagnosis establishment or other descriptive data. Clinical significance is essential in evaluating the important distinctions amid the assessed groups as well as in measuring the meaningfulness of the acquired outcome for example in evaluating the efficacy and intervention’s effectiveness (Heavey, 2015). Statistical significance fails to offer information in regard to clinical applicability and effective size.
References
Satake, E. (2015). Statistical methods and reasoning for the clinical sciences: Evidence-based practice.
Heavey, E. (2015).Differentiating Statistical significance and clinical significance. American Nurse Today. Retrieved from https://www.brockport.edu/daily_eagle/doc/2015-04/item_8038_7659.pdf