Background: Undergraduate nursing students experience significant differences between practice with models, manikins, or simulation applications and real patients in a clinical setting. Students' experiences applying their theoretical knowledge to real patient-care practices are little understood.
Objective: To determine the experiences of nursing students in providing skin, chronic wound, and ostomy care to real patients for the first time in a clinical setting within the content of the Ostomy and Wound Care Nursing Track Program (OWCNTP) and to define factors affecting this program.
Methods: The research was conducted qualitatively using the individual critical incident technique, and 17 senior undergraduate nursing students enrolled in the Nursing OWCNTP were selected using a simple random sampling method. In the classroom setting, individual face-to-face interviews were conducted using the critical incident technique. Data were analyzed with inductive content analysis.
Results: The research found that students experience genuine caregiving in putting their experiences from the Track Program into practice with real patients in a clinical setting. Three main themes were identified: experiencing real patient care in a clinical setting, being a competent student, and being a novice student.
Conclusions: The study found that nursing students enrolled in the OWCNTP could apply their theoretical knowledge to care for real patients in clinical settings. Therefore, it is recommended that these programs be integrated into nursing curricula.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ASW.0000000000000151 | DOI Listing |
Nurs Open
January 2025
Department of Nursing, Haliç University Faculty of Health Sciences, İstanbul, Turkey.
Aim: This study examined the experiences of nursing students who attended hospital clinicals during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Design: Study was conducted in a descriptive design.
Methods: A total of 21 nursing students from the second, third and fourth grades who attended hospital clinics in the spring semester of the 2020-2021 academic year and volunteered to participate in the study were included in the study.
West J Nurs Res
January 2025
College of Nursing, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE, USA.
Background: Healthcare professionals' repeated exposure to critical incidents can cause various physical and psychological symptoms with potentially severe personal and professional consequences. Healthcare students' exposure to critical incidents begins during their clinical education. Despite known consequences, healthcare education has yet to implement a standardized approach for preparing students for critical incidents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Sci Rep
January 2025
Center of Educational Research in Medical Sciences (CERMS), Department of Medical Education, school of medicine Iran University of Medical Sciences Tehran Iran.
Background And Aims: The primary teaching approach known as "traditional lecture" has drawbacks, including being dull and reducing student participation, which has made students feel negatively about it. It seems that by implementing certain changes, active learning techniques like the "Audience Response System" could alter students' perceptions of lectures. The purpose of this study is to find out how employing "ARS" throughout a course has affected nursing students' perceptions of traditional lectures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Nurs Stud Adv
June 2025
Radboud Institute for Health Sciences, Scientific Center for Quality of Healthcare (IQ Health), Radboud University Medical Center, Kapittelweg 54, 6525 EP Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Background: Evidence-based practice (EBP) is crucial for appropriate, effective, and affordable care. Despite EBP education, barriers like low self-efficacy and outcome expectancy limit nurses' engagement in EBP. Reliable scales are essential to evaluate interventions aimed at improving self-efficacy and outcome expectancy in EBP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerspect Med Educ
January 2025
Wenckebach Institute, Lifelong Learning, Education and Assessment Research Network (LEARN), University of Groningen, University Medical Centre Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
Background: Educators struggle to implement Interprofessional Education (IPE) in workplace settings. We adopted an educational design research (EDR) approach to implement an IPE activity and establish design principles supporting IPE implementation in workplace settings.
Method: We adopted an iterative process of analysis/exploration, design/construction and evaluation/reflection.
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