scholarly journals The text-mining analysis of the role lettering method before and after the first clinical practice for nursing students.

Author(s):  
Takenobu Ohishi
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-113
Author(s):  
Matthew Young ◽  
Tansy Wilkinson

To assess the effectiveness of near-peer educators to improve human factors education for medical and nursing students managing an unwell simulated patient. 12 medical and eight nursing students volunteered. Doctors and nurses qualified for less than 2 years were used to run and debrief the sessions. Self-assessment Likert-scale questionnaires, focussing on topics related to human factors along with differences between near-peer and senior-led simulation sessions, were used before and after the intervention. The results showed an improvement in every question for topics related to human factors. The highest post-programme scores were in escalation of care and knowing professional role or limitations. Students scored near-peers highly in relation to relevance to practice, content covered and approachability. The post-programme questionnaires show students prefer near-peer to senior-led simulation sessions. The interprofessional nature was well received. Our project differs from traditional undergraduate simulation, where students can act out of the role they are training in. Near-peer educators appear to be more approachable and cover content more relevant to clinical practice compared with senior staff. Improvements were seen in every human factor related field.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Elisabeth Solvik ◽  
Solveig Struksnes

Introduction. Requirements for Patient Safety suggest that students encounter patients well prepared. In clinical laboratory practice (CLP), the students simulate patient situations as a preparation for internship. Various CLP models have been tried out to meet the students’ prerequisites and learning strategies.Objectives. The purpose of this study was to try out two different learning sessions related to the bed bath procedure.Design and Methods. The study has a descriptive, quantitative design with elements from clinically controlled trials.Sample. The population of 160 first-year students was randomly divided into two classes.Questionnaires. Two questionnaires were answered with six-month intervals: Form 1 immediately after the first training session and Form 2 a short time after clinical practice.Findings. A majority of the nursing students reported that the exercises in the clinical lab were a good way to prepare for the practice, although most of them did not perceive that the procedure conducted at the university resembled how it is conducted in clinical practice. Age or level of discomfort related to organization of the skills training did not have impact on the students’ confidence in mastering bed bath in clinical practice. Students without previous experience were less confident to master the procedure in clinical practice, but the results evened out during the internship.Conclusions. The results from this study could indicate that the students’ age to a larger extent should be considered in the universities’ facilitation of nursing students’ clinical preparations, to improve the transition to “real life” as smoothly and meaningfully as possible to nursing students.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 341-361
Author(s):  
Gonzalo Grau-Pérez ◽  
J. Guillermo Milán

In Uruguay, Lacanian ideas arrived in the 1960s, into a context of Kleinian hegemony. Adopting a discursive approach, this study researched the initial reception of these ideas and its effects on clinical practices. We gathered a corpus of discursive data from clinical cases and theoretical-doctrinal articles (from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s). In order to examine the effects of Lacanian ideas, we analysed the difference in the way of interpreting the clinical material before and after Lacan's reception. The results of this research illuminate some epistemological problems of psychoanalysis, especially the relationship between theory and clinical practice.


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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