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Undergraduate nursing students' experiences of practicing caring behaviours with standardised patients
Jönköping University, School of Health and Welfare, HHJ, Department of Nursing Science. Jönköping University, School of Health and Welfare, The Jönköping Academy for Improvement of Health and Welfare. Jönköping University, School of Health and Welfare, HHJ. CHILD.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-0261-2217
School of Nursing, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA; Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Department of Health and Caring Sciences, Linnaeus University, Växjö, Sweden.
Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Department of Health and Caring Sciences, Linnaeus University, Växjö, Sweden.
Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Department of Health and Caring Sciences, Linnaeus University, Växjö, Sweden.
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2023 (English)In: Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences, ISSN 0283-9318, E-ISSN 1471-6712, Vol. 37, no 1, p. 271-281Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Sustainable development
Sustainable Development
Abstract [en]

Rationale

Undergraduate nursing students' learning opportunities to practice caring behaviours to assure compassionate and competent nursing practice with standardised patients are few. Earlier studies primarily focused on practicing communication skills in relation to mental health or developing psychomotor skills while caring for a patient with a specific diagnosis.

Aim

The study aim was to describe undergraduate nursing students' experiences of practicing caring behaviours with a standardised patient.

Method

A sample of forty-eight undergraduate nursing students in semester four at a school of nursing in southern Sweden, enrolled in a full-time, 5-week, on-campus elective caring behaviour course, were at the first and last week individually video-recorded during two caring behaviour simulations encountering a standardised patient. After observing each of their video-recordings, students completed written reflections focusing on their own compassionate and competent verbal and nonverbal caring behaviour. In total, 96 individual written reflections were analysed using qualitative content analysis to describe the experience.

Results

One main theme emerged: The challenge of being mindfully present in patient encounters. Four themes further described the experience: A challenging but realistic learning experience, learning the impact of nonverbal behaviour, recognising the complexity of verbal behaviour, and learning to be with the patient instead of only doing for the patient.

Conclusion

When caring is intertwined with visible and realistic nursing practice in simulations using standardised patients it facilitates undergraduate nursing students learning compassionate and competent caring behaviour. The learning experience opened the students' eyes to the impact of practicing caring, recognising that being with is not the same as doing for the patient, and thus, how challenging it is to be mindfully present in patient encounters. Designing caring behaviour simulations with standardised patients is a feasible and efficacious educational learning didactic to facilitate students' learning caring behaviour and enhancing patients' experiences.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
John Wiley & Sons, 2023. Vol. 37, no 1, p. 271-281
Keywords [en]
caring behaviours, nursing education, qualitative content analysis, reflective practice, simulation, standardised patient, Swanson's Theory of Caring
National Category
Nursing
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-56172DOI: 10.1111/scs.13077ISI: 000773909300001PubMedID: 35348240Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85127358707Local ID: HOA;intsam;806056OAI: oai:DiVA.org:hj-56172DiVA, id: diva2:1650867
Available from: 2022-04-08 Created: 2022-04-08 Last updated: 2023-06-29Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Bridging the gap between caring theory and nursing practice: Learning experiences of undergraduate nursing students in a caring behavior course
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Bridging the gap between caring theory and nursing practice: Learning experiences of undergraduate nursing students in a caring behavior course
2022 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Background: Healthcare providers are obligated to practice with scientific knowledge in order to deliver high quality and safe care based on patients’ needs. Despite this obligation, complaints from care recipients and their significant others regarding healthcare providers’ lack of compassion and competent care in their professional encounters have increased. In the discipline of nursing, theoretical structures of caring, conceptualized as behaviors, have been established as the heart and core value of guidance in all nursing practice. In nursing education, however, caring has tended to be taught as an intangible aspect of nursing practice, described as hidden curricula, thus, focus more on developing knowledge and psychomotor skills instead of learning caring behaviors. Studies that examine how undergraduate nursing students can learn caring behaviors explicitly are rare. Thus, a stronger emphasis on the learning of caring in the context of a caring behavior course that uses a variety of learning didactics is needed. Without adequate theoretical structures for caring-based observational behavioral instruments assessing verbal and non-verbal caring and non-caring behaviors, there is little evidence to help develop the learning of caring behaviors.

Aim: The overall aim of this thesis was to study how a caring behavior course in undergraduate nursing education influenced students’ learning of caring behaviors.

Method: This thesis was conducted among undergraduate nursing students at a university in Sweden. The participants attended a 7.5-credit (five-week) Caring Behavior Course (the CBC) in semester four during spring and fall 2018 and spring 2019. The CBC was facilitated through a student-centered learning approach intertwined into reflective practice with the learning didactics of narrative pedagogy and simulation; it comprised six voluntary lectures, five mandatory seminars, and two mandatory caring behavior simulation days and examinations. All data were collected from the students participating in the CBC. Two of the four scientific papers constituting this thesis had a qualitative design based on focus group interviews (paper I) and individual written reflections (paper II). Analyses was conducted using qualitative content analysis. One paper had an instrument development design to develop and test an observational behavioral instrument based on Swanson’s Theory of Caring (paper III). Lastly, one paper had a quantitative observational design using the CBCS on video-recorded observational behavioral data collected in the CBC (paper IV). Analyses was conducted using descriptive statistics and Wilcoxon signed rank test (paper IV).

Results: The undergraduate nursing students’ participation in the CBC influenced their learning of caring behaviors. It deepened their understanding and knowledge of caring. The students became aware that learning caring is a task that requires effort because the meaning of caring encompasses nurses’ active engagement in practicing caring behaviors. These findings are also supported through the observational behavioral instrument, through the developed Caring Behavior Coding Scheme based on Swanson’s Theory of Caring; it was found that participation in the CBC influenced the undergraduate nursing students verbal and non-verbal caring and non-caring behaviors.

Conclusions: This thesis demonstrated that bridging the gap between caring theory and nursing practice in the CBC using a variety of learning didactics influenced undergraduate nursing students’ learning of caring behaviors. The results contributed to strengthening the knowledge that caring and learning are parallel processes in the undergraduate nursing students’ development into becoming compassionate and competent caring nurses, with the intended outcome of patient healing and well-being.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Jönköping: Jönköping University, School of Health and Welfare, 2022. p. 101
Series
Hälsohögskolans avhandlingsserie, ISSN 1654-3602 ; 120
Keywords
Caring, Narrative pedagogy, Observational behavioral instrument, Qualitative method, Quantitative observational method, Reflective practice, Student-centered learning approach, Simulation, Swanson’s Theory of Caring, Undergraduate nursing education
National Category
Nursing Learning
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-58498 (URN)978-91-88669-19-3 (ISBN)
Public defence
2022-10-07, Forum Humanum, Hälsohögskolan, Jönköping, 13:00 (Swedish)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2022-09-16 Created: 2022-09-16 Last updated: 2022-09-19Bibliographically approved

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Mårtensson, SophieBroström, AndersBjörk, Maria

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Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences
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