08 Aug Cumulative Trauma Among Mayas Living in Southeast Florida Eugenia
Research critique 2 on Cumulative Trauma Among Mayas Living in Southeast Florida Eugenia I. Millender1 • John Lowe2
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Research Article Critique 3 Legal & Ethical Issues Briefly discuss institutional review board approval for the study.Explain how ethical principles of research (beneficence/harm, justice, privacy, and autonomy) were followed to protect subjects, if that was explained or implied.If the study included subjects from a vulnerable population as described in the textbook, describe any additional safeguards used to protect them. Measurement Tools Fill out the table below for the major variables in the study (NOT demographic variables).You can add rows as needed, depending on how many measurement tools were used.Boxes can be expanded for more content. Name of Tool (Author, year) Level of Measurement Reliability reported Validity reported Data Collection Describe data collection procedures described in the study. Include who collected the data, at what time points, and how data was collected. Evaluate how clearly and completely the procedures were described. If more than one data collector was used for the study, describe the training of the data collectors, and how/whether interrater reliability was adequately assessed. Reference List
Millender, E. & Lowe, J. (2017) Cumulative trauma among Mayas living in Southeast Florida. J Immigrant Minority Health, 19(3), 598-605.DOI:10.1007/s10903-015-0337-3American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (7th ed.). Author. ISBN: 978-1-4338-3216-1Gray, J. R., Grove, S. K., & Sutherland, S. (2021). Burns and Grove’s the practice of nursing research: Appraisal, synthesis, and generation of evidence (9th ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-323-67317-4Heavy, E., (2019). Statistics for nursing: A practical approach (3rd ed.). Jones and Bartlett. ISBN: 978-1-284-14201
