Effects of DM Health Education Practice on Knowledge of DM, Core Nursing Competencies and Clinical Practice Satisfaction of Nursing Students

Author(s):  
JeongMo Park ◽  
◽  
ChungSook Kim ◽  
MiWon Kim ◽  
◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilia Rua ◽  
Luciana Netto Maia ◽  
Sandra Campinos Rodrigues ◽  
Marta Silva

Introduction: Health Education in Sexual and Reproductive Health, appear in the practice of nursing students, as a form of health promotion in young people. The development of these skills is essential during nursing degree. Aims: As part of preparation of clinical practice, in Primary Health Care, a seminar was held - Dating without Risks-, with the purpose of promoting knowledge on Sexual and Reproductive Health, developing active health education strategies and promoting reflection on sexuality in young people. Methodology: We used pedagogical strategies, transferable to a Health Education session: Think-Pairs-Share; Fill in with post-it and Collective Construction. We asked about the importance of Health Education and the approach to sexuality in young people, risk behaviours in dating and a collective construction of an "Affections Alphabet". Results: The seminar exceeded the student’s expectations. The strategies used appear to be easily transferable to Health Education sessions in clinical practice context, providing more interaction between the group, promoting greater openness in approaching the theme.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rui Hou ◽  
Lin Zhu ◽  
Wenjun Jin

The practice of nursing health education is an important practice process that nursing students must experience before graduation. Due to many reasons, there are some problems, such as the imbalance of supply and demand of teaching resources, the lag of teaching ideas, the imperfect assessment and feedback mechanism. Through the research on the practice teaching and reform of nursing health education, this paper proposes that we should take the nursing path information system as the basis, take the standardized teaching process as the basic mode of nursing professional course teaching to actively construct the corresponding medical school homogenization management platform, and strengthen the teaching summary and innovative development, so as to truly promote the practical development of nursing health education, and improve the teaching effect related medical colleges and universities nursing health education practice teaching, as well as provide some reference and ideas of the homogeneity management for medical school.


Author(s):  
Titilayo Dorothy Odetola ◽  
Olusola Oluwasola ◽  
Christoph Pimmer ◽  
Oluwafemi Dipeolu ◽  
Samson Oluwayemi Akande ◽  
...  

The “disconnect” between the body of knowledge acquired in classroom settings and the application of this knowledge in clinical practice is one of the main reasons for professional fear, anxiety and feelings of incompetence among freshly graduated nurses. While the phenomenon of the theory-to-practice gap has been researched quite extensively in high-income country settings much less is known about nursing students’ experiences in a developing country context. To rectify this shortcoming, the qualitative study investigated the experiences of nursing students in their attempt to apply what they learn in classrooms in clinical learning contexts in seven sites in Nigeria. Thematic content analysis was used to analyse data gained from eight focus group discussions (n = 80) with the students. The findings reveal a multifaceted theory-practice gap which plays out along four tensions: (1) procedural, i.e. the difference between practices from education institutions and the ones enacted in clinical wards – and contradictions that emerge even within one clinical setting; (2) political, i.e. conflicts that arise between students and clinical staff, especially personnel with a lower qualification profile than the degree that students pursue; (3) material, i.e. the disconnect between contemporary instruments and equipment available in schools and the lack thereof in clinical settings; and (4) temporal, i.e. restricted opportunities for supervised practice owing to time constraints in clinical settings in which education tends to be undervalued. Many of these aspects are linked to and aggravated by infrastructural limitations, which are typical for the setting of a developing country. Nursing students need to be prepared regarding how to deal with the identified procedural, political, material and temporal tensions before and while being immersed in clinical practice, and, in so doing, they need to be supported by educationally better qualified clinical staff.


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