Obesity Among Adolescent in The United States Project

Obesity Among Adolescent in The United States Project

Obesity Among Adolescent in The United States Project

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  • The capstone project topic can be a clinical practice problem, an organizational issue, a quality improvement suggestion, a leadership initiative, or an educational need appropriate to your area of interest as well as your practice immersion (practicum) setting. Examples of the integration of community health, leadership, and an EBP can be found on the “Educational and Community-Based Programs” page of the Healthy People 2020 website.
  • Write a 500-750 word description of your proposed capstone project topic. Make sure to include the following:
    1. The problem, issue, suggestion, initiative, or educational need that will be the focus of the project
    2. The setting or context in which the problem, issue, suggestion, initiative, or educational need can be observed.
    3. A description providing a high level of detail regarding the problem, issue, suggestion, initiative, or educational need.
    4. Impact of the problem, issue, suggestion, initiative, or educational need on the work environment, the quality of care provided by staff, and patient outcomes.
    5. Significance of the problem, issue, suggestion, initiative, or educational need and its implications to nursing.
    6. A proposed solution to the identified project topic

    You are required to retrieve and assess a minimum of 8 peer-reviewed articles. Plan your time accordingly to complete this assignment.Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. An abstract is not required.

A research proposal is intended to convince others that you have a worthwhile research project and that you have the competence and the work-plan to complete it. The research proposal, or PICOT statement/question must address the following:

  • (P) – Population refers to the sample of subjects you wish to recruit for your study. There may be a fine balance between defining a sample that is most likely to respond to your intervention and one that can be generalized to patients that are likely to be seen in actual practice.
  • (I) – Intervention refers to the treatment that will be provided to subjects enrolled in your study.
  • (C) – Comparison identifies what you plan on using as a reference group to compare with your treatment intervention. Many study designs refer to this as the control group. If an existing treatment is considered the ‘gold standard’, then this should be the comparison group.
  • (O) – Outcome represents what result you plan on measuring to examine the effectiveness of your intervention.
  • (T) – Time describes the duration for your data collection.