29 research outputs found

    Creating a Professional Development Plan for a Simulation Consortium

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    As the United States struggles with health care reform and a nursing education system that inadequately prepares students for practice, dramatic advances in educational technology signal opportunities for both academic and practicing nurses to affect our profession as never before. Simulation technologies provide large and small institutions with the means to educate health care students and novice professionals effectively and efficiently through hands-on experience, but the costs of such a venture can be prohibitive. A simulation consortium offers a venue for different health care and educational institutions with shared goals to pool knowledge, monies, and labor toward health care education throughout a geographic area. This article details one Midwestern U.S. region's work in creating a professional development plan for a new simulation consortium

    NLn jeffries simulation theory

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    Simulation as a Vehicle for Enhancing Collaborative Practice Models

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    Clinical simulation used in a collaborative practice approach is a powerful tool to prepare health care providers for shared responsibility for patient care. Clinical simulations are being used increasingly in professional curricula to prepare providers for quality practice. Little is known, however, about how these simulations can be used to foster collaborative practice across disciplines. This article provides an overview of what simulation is, what collaborative practice models are, and how to set up a model using simulations. An example of a collaborative practice model is presented, and nursing implications of using a collaborative practice model in simulations are discussed. © 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

    Faculty Development When Initiating Simulation Programs: Lessons Learned From the National Simulation Study

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    Nursing programs are seeking guidance from boards of nursing about how much simulation can be substituted for traditional clinical practice. To address this question and to assess educational outcomes when simulation is substituted for clinical time, the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) conducted a study using 10 nursing schools across the United States.This article focuses on the faculty development needed to maintain fidelity in the intervention, implementation, and evaluation processes of initiating simulation programs. Lessons learned from preparing faculty for the NCSBN simulation study are shared and may be applicable to schools seeking to educate faculty in teaching simulation

    Enhancing Empathy in Undergraduate Nursing Students: An Experiential Ostomate Simulation.

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    aim The aim of this study was to implement and evaluate an experiential learning simulation created to enhance nursing students\u27 empathy during patient care encounters. background The investigators proposed that an ostomy simulation experience would be an efficient method for providing this educational content. method Content analysis was conducted on essays using Krippendorff\u27s technique to quantify the simulation. results Each unit of measure, or paper, contained between 1 to 14 empathie comments. Of the total sample, 22.8 percent had three or five empathie comments; 10 percent had four, and 9 percent had six or more comments per paper. Eighty-five percent of participants felt this simulation experience was beneficial for enhancing empathy in clinical practice. conclusion The assignment was an effective, objective method that utilized simulation to teach empathy to baccalaureate nursing students

    Enhancing Empathy In Undergraduate Nursing Students: An Experiential Ostomate Simulation

    No full text
    aim The aim of this study was to implement and evaluate an experiential learning simulation created to enhance nursing students\u27 empathy during patient care encounters. background The investigators proposed that an ostomy simulation experience would be an efficient method for providing this educational content. method Content analysis was conducted on essays using Krippendorff\u27s technique to quantify the simulation. results Each unit of measure, or paper, contained between 1 to 14 empathie comments. Of the total sample, 22.8 percent had three or five empathie comments; 10 percent had four, and 9 percent had six or more comments per paper. Eighty-five percent of participants felt this simulation experience was beneficial for enhancing empathy in clinical practice. conclusion The assignment was an effective, objective method that utilized simulation to teach empathy to baccalaureate nursing students

    The NCSBN National Simulation Study: A Longitudinal, Randomized, Controlled Study Replacing Clinical Hours with Simulation in Prelicensure Nursing Education

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    Providing high-quality clinical experiences for students has been a perennial challenge for nursing programs. Short patient length of stays, high patient acuity, disparities in learning experiences, and the amount of time instructors spend supervising skills have long been issues. More recently, other challenges have emerged: more programs competing for limited clinical sites, faculty shortages, facilities not granting students access to electronic medical records, and patient safety initiatives that decrease the number of students allowed on a patient unit or restrict their activity to observing care
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