Aim: This paper serves as the outline for a simulation that nurse educators can use to better prepare graduate students for the clinical setting and ensure the student's essential competencies prior to clinical practicum.
Background: Educators often struggle with whether nurse practitioner students are sufficiently prepared for their clinical practicum once they have successfully completed the didactic component of their coursework.
Method: This paper addresses the methods by which one institution uses standardized patients in a simulation laboratory to better prepare the graduate students for their first clinical practicum. The implications of using clinical simulation to enhance both student and faculty learning are addressed.
Results: Simulation done prior to a student's clinical practicum prepares the student for patient cases in the clinical setting.
Conclusion: Clinical simulation can enhance the knowledge, skills, and attitudes that nurse practitioner students need in the clinical setting.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5480/1536-5026-34.2.118 | DOI Listing |
Am J Crit Care
January 2025
Christine A. Schindler is a critical care pediatric nurse practitioner, critical care advanced practice provider program director, Children's Wisconsin/Medical College of Wisconsin, and a clinical professor, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Background: The quality cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) coach role was developed for hospital-based resuscitation teams. This supplementary team member (CPR coach) provides real-time, verbal feedback on chest compression quality to compressors during a cardiac arrest.
Objectives: To evaluate the impact of a quality CPR coach training intervention on resuscitation teams, including presence of coaches on teams and physiologic metrics of quality CPR delivery in real compression events.
Br J Gen Pract
December 2024
University of Bristol, School of Psychological Science, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Background: Rapid microbiological point-of-care tests (POCTRM) present an opportunity to reduce antibiotic exposure and antimicrobial resistance. So far, there is limited understanding of how POCTRM may support clinicians in primary care in the UK and how POCTs might be integrated into practice.
Aim: To investigate clinicians' views on how POCTRM could influence clinical decisions and routine practice, and perspectives on how POCTRM may impact the clinician-patient relationship.
Front Med (Lausanne)
December 2024
Department of Emergency Medicine, Chi Mei Medical Center, Tainan, Taiwan.
Aim: Transitional care in the emergency department (ED) has the potential to improve outcomes for older patients, but the specific population benefits from it and impact in Taiwan remain unclear. Therefore, we conducted this study.
Methods: An interdisciplinary team comprising emergency physicians, dedicated transitional care nurse (TCN), nurse practitioners, nurses, geriatricians, and social workers was established at a tertiary medical center.
Plast Aesthet Nurs (Phila)
December 2024
Kristi Elliott, MSN, RN, FNP-C, CPSN, CANS, WCC, ISPAN-F, is the ISPAN President and a Nurse Practitioner at the UT Southwestern Plastic Surgery Clinic, Dallas, Texas.
Nurs Rep
December 2024
School of Nursing, Fundación Jiménez Díaz, Madrid Autonomous University, 28049 Madrid, Spain.
Background: Adolescent eating disorders pose a significant public health challenge and strongly affect both physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis is important for improving treatment outcomes, though it remains complex due to multiple influencing factors. The family perspective is essential in this process, as it provides valuable insights into changes in adolescents' habits and emotional health.
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