Cars Table That You Will Chapter

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CARS Data Criteria and the Literature Review

All of the data was taken from professional, peer reviewed journals, or scholarly dissertations that have been submitted in the pursuit of doctorate in nursing. All of these sites fulfill the CARS criteria regarding the data points.

However, this is not enough in graduate school. While the CARS research mostly surrounds Online sites, professional journals, theses, or dissertations can also be biased. The authors can also have hidden agendas. In addition, they can also have more subtle biases and defects. For instance, they can have faults in their research that are subtle and unintended. This is known as selection bias. In the professional literature about healthcare interventions do the following: "selection bias refers to systematic differences between comparison groups in prognosis or responsiveness to treatment." In outfield, unlike many others in academia is especially critical because it can result in the death or harm to patients who are negatively affected by or medial prognoses, treatments or responses ("Selection bias," 2007).

REFERENCE Source

Credibility

Accuracy

Reasonableness

Support

Al-Turki, H.A. (2010). Burnout syndrome among multinational nurses working in Saudi Arabia. Annals of African Medicine, 9(4), 226-9.

Annals of African Medicine is an established periodical. Furthermore, Dr. H.A. Al-Turki is a professor in the electrical engineering department of King Abdulaziz

University, Saudi Arabia and an expert in his field.
This source is recent, and cited by other scholars in the field with little to none contradictions.

The article appears to be written in good faith, in order to better understand a phenomenon known as burnout syndrome in order to better treat and prevent it.

All sources listed can be checked and verified and are of high academic caliber.

Gombor, A. (2009). Burnout in Hungarian and Swedish emergency nurses: Demographic variables, work- related factors, social support, personality, and life satisfaction as determinants of burnout. Budapest, Hungary: University of Eotvos Lorand.

A. Gombor is a doctoral graduate of the University of Eotvos Lorand, of the school of psychology, which is world-renowned.

This paper was written with the supervision of Prof. Dr. Habil. Attila Olah, C.Sc.

Dean of the School of Psychology. It was defended in front of a team of peers of academics.

This dissertation truly tries to shed light on all the determining factors which can influence burnout in emergency nurses, looking at a range of elements.

A tremendous amount of high level sources went into the writing of this paper, all of which can be verified and confirmed of worth and authenticity.

Glasberg, A.L., Eriksson, S.,.....

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