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6. What did the observer do after the study ended?
- All of this
- Interviewed the nurse and offered psychiatric first aid
- Gave the nurse some water
- Argued with the nurse
7. Were medication usually given at this time of the day?
8. How many calls had coloquial issues such as not being able to immediately find the astroten?
9. What did the nurse who refused say?
- That she didn't know what to do
- That she felt hostility towards the caller
- That she got angry
10. For the questionnaire, what was the experimental design?
- Repeated measures
- Matched pairs
- Independent measures
11. Were the wards busy at the time of the study?
12. What else could have been a cause of these results?
- How busy the ward was at the time
- The fact that the study took place in 1966 and so gender differences may have interfered
- The patients
- The observer effect
13. Name the wards that the study took place on
- Maternity, emergency, paediatric and surgical
- Medical, surgical, paediatric and psychiatric
- Emergency, medical, paediatric and psychiatric
- Just psychiatric
14. What was the tone of the phone coversation?
- Serious and with urgency
- Courteous, yet self confident
- Cocky
- A bit shakey and usure
15. What happened when the pps insisted on referring the call to someone else?
- The caller agreed to continue
- The phone call was ended
- The caller spoke to the next nurse instead
16. How many of the nurses on the questionnaire claim that they wouldn't have given the medication?
17. Was a doctor usually present at the time of the study in the ward?
18. What did the pill box say was the maximum dose of the drug?
19. How many pps were there in the experiment?
- 24 nurses
- 22 student nurses
- 22 nurses
- 39 nurses
20. What time did the study take place?
- Between 10-11:30am
- Between 7am-9pm
- Between 7-9pm
- Between 9pm-10pm