Defining evidence-based nursing practice: An interpretative phenomenological study.

Nurse Educ Today

Department of Rehabilitation, University Hospital Brno, Brno, Czech Republic; Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic; Department of Rehabilitation, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how pre-registered nursing students define and understand evidence-based nursing practice (EBNP) during their clinical placement experiences.
  • Through interviews with 20 nursing students from various institutions in Hong Kong, four key themes emerged, including the importance of reliable learning sources, rationalizing nursing practice, establishing care standards through critical thinking, and enhancing professionalism.
  • The findings highlight that while students strive to improve patient outcomes, they face challenges in identifying valid evidence and express doubts about instructors' EBNP knowledge when encountering unfamiliar procedures, indicating a need for curriculum improvements to support their learning.

Article Abstract

Background: Evidence-based nursing practice (EBNP) has been regarded core competencies in nursing practice and education. Defining evidence-based nursing practice and translating evidence into nursing practice by nursing students who are green to clinical practice in their education journey remain unclear.

Aim: To explore how pre-registered nursing students define and characterize evidence-based nursing practice as they participate in their clinical practicum.

Design: This study used an interpretive phenomenological qualitative study design.

Settings And Participants: Twenty nursing students were interviewed for their clinical practicum experience from four universities, one nursing college and one hospital-based nursing school in Hong Kong.

Methods: Data was generated through semi-structured in-depth interview and analyzed following interpretative phenomenological analysis guidelines, using a cyclical coding process.

Results: Four themes emerged regarding nursing students' definition of EBNP, highlighting that EBNP is 'identifying a reliable learning source', by which they can 'rationalize their nursing practice', and enabling them to 'establish care standard through critical thinking', and eventual 'fostering their professionalism' to improve health outcomes and reduce potential harms.

Conclusion: Nursing students defined and characterized evidence-based nursing practice as core competencies in accompany their practicum that enables them to learn and grow professionally with a universal desire to be qualified, cope with doubt, and improve patient outcome. They recognized the challenges in identifying evidence and emphasized conservative approach to validate the evidence to avoid patient harm. Students expressed doubt towards their instructors EBNP when observing procedures untaught at school, which requires the curriculum model to foster students' skills in applying and appraising evidence and instructors' capacity to rationalize and role model EBNP.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2024.106400DOI Listing

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