Background: The shift in healthcare to extramural leads to more patients with complex health problems receiving nursing care at home. However, the interest of baccalaureate nursing students for community nursing is moderate, which contributes to widespread labour-market shortages. This study investigates the effect of a more ‘communitycare-oriented’ curriculum on nursing students’ perceptions of community care. Methods: A quasi-experimental quantitative survey study with a historic control group (n = 477; study cohorts graduating in 2015, 2016, and 2017; response rate 90%) and an intervention group (n = 170; graduating in 2018; response rate 93%) was performed in nursing students of a University of Applied Sciences in a large city in the Netherlands. The intervention group underwent a new curriculum containing extended elements of community care. The primary outcome was assessed with the Scale on Community Care Perceptions (SCOPE). The control and intervention group were compared on demographics, placement preferences and perceptions with a chi-square or T-test. Multiple regression was used to investigate the effect of the curriculum-redesign on nursing students’ perceptions of community care.Results: The comparison between the control and intervention group on students’ perceptions of community care shows no significant differences (mean 6.18 vs 6.21 [range 1–10], respectively), nor does the curriculum-redesign have a positive effect on students’ perceptions F (1,635) = .021, p = .884, R2 = < .001. The comparison on placement preferences also shows no significant differences and confirms the hospital’s popularity (72.7% vs 76.5%, respectively) while community care is less often preferred (9.2% vs 8.2%, respectively). The demographics ‘working in community care’ and ‘belonging to a church/religious group’ appear to be significant predictors of more positive perceptions of community care. Conclusions: Graduating students who experienced a more ‘community-care-oriented’ curriculum did not more often prefer community care placement, nor did their perceptions of community care change. Apparently, four years of education and placement experiences have only little impact and students’ perceptions are relatively static. It would be worth a try to conduct a large-scale approach in combination with a carefully thought out strategy, based on and tying in with the language and culture of younger people. Keywords: Community care, Nurse education, Curriculum design, Perceptions, Career choice
BackgroundWorking in the perioperative context is complex and challenging. The continual evaluation in this environment underscores the need for adaptability to technological advancements, and requires substantial allocation of resources for training and education. This study aimed to explore personality characteristics of nurse anesthetists and surgical nurses that are instrumental for sustainable employability in technologically advanced environment.MethodsExploratory, cross-sectional survey study including nurse anesthetists and surgical nurses, both certified and in training, and a sample of the normative Dutch population. Personality characteristics were identified with the Big Five Inventory, which consisted of 60 items answered on a five-point Likert scale (strongly disagree to strongly agree).ResultsSpecific personality traits were found for nurse anesthetists and surgical nurses when compared to the normative Dutch population. Traits of both nurse anesthetists and surgical nurses differed significantly on all domains of the Big Five Inventory, with the largest differences found within the dimension negative emotionally.ConclusionsThis study highlights the role of specific personality traits in maintaining employability within the rapidly evolving and technologically advanced landscape of healthcare. It emphasizes the relationship between individual traits and professional excellence, being crucial educational strategies for overall improvement in healthcare.
Background: Differences in professional practice might hinder initiation of student participation during international placements, and thereby limit workplace learning. This study explores how healthcare students overcome differences in professional practice during initiation of international placements. Methods: Twelve first-year physiotherapy students recorded individual audio diaries during the first month of international clinical placement. Recordings were transcribed, anonymized, and analyzed following a template analysis approach. Team discussions focused on thematic interpretation of results. Results: Students described tackling differences in professional practice via ongoing negotiations of practice between them, local professionals, and peers. Three themes were identified as the focus of students’ orientation and adjustment efforts: professional practice, educational context, and individual approaches to learning. Healthcare students’ initiation during international placements involved a cyclical process of orientation and adjustment, supported by active participation, professional dialogue, and self-regulated learning strategies.Conclusions: Initiation of student participation during international placements can be supported by establishing a continuous dialogue between student and healthcare professionals. This dialogue helps align mutual expectations regarding scope of practice, and increase understanding of professional and educational practices. Better understanding, in turn, creates trust and favors meaningful students’ contribution to practice and patient care.
Training nurses and midwives to treat their patients well There are some specific factors facilitating the modification of the nursing and midwifery bachelor curriculum The development of health literacy and respectful and compassionate care competences among bachelor nursing and midwifery students in Tanzania
Since 2015, the research group Lifelong Learning in Music of Hanze University of Applied Sciences Groningen, together with the University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG), has developed and researched the MiMiC practice for patients and nurses on surgical wards. The musicians make tailor-made music in the patients' rooms in collaboration with patients and nurses. They do this on the basis of verbal and non-verbal contact with patients and nurses. Person-centred music-making turns out to be easy to realise in a medical setting and to be meaningful for all involved. People who have just had surgery experience less pain. Nurses feel more deeply involved with their patients. Musicians show sensitivity for the social context in which they carry out their artistic practice.In this project the research group is developing an innovative artistic practice with a focus on elderly patients. Musicians work with patients and the care staff that are taking care of these patients during their stay in hospital. The research should lead to insights in the effects of this practice and to a new training for master students and professional musicians who want wish to specialise themselves in this field. Pilots on six different wards of the UMCG with professional musicians and master students are part of the research which will last two years in its entirety. The project has been granted funding from the 'Banning de Jong Fonds' of the national 'Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds' and the 'Fonds Sluyterman van Loo'.
Aanleiding Mede door de vergrijzing groeit de zorgvraag in Nederland. Tegelijkertijd vallen veel verpleegkundigen uit door fysieke en mentale arbeidsbelasting. Dit begint al tijdens de opleiding/aan de start van de loopbaan. Dreigende arbeidstekorten en decentralisatie in de zorg vragen om verpleegkundigen die regie kunnen voeren over hun eigen werkgerelateerde gezondheid. Er is nog weinig wetenschappelijke kennis over het vroegtijdig signaleren en aanpakken van uitval onder verpleegkundigen. Bovendien hapert de invoer van effectieve interventies. Daarom willen zorginstellingen, verpleegkunde-opleidingen en wetenschappelijke organisaties onderzoek doen naar de oorzaken van uitval en een instrument ontwikkelen om problemen vroegtijdig te herkennen en te ondervangen. Doelstelling Het consortium wil een wetenschappelijk en praktisch onderbouwd instrumentarium ontwikkelen voor het signaleren van risicofactoren, gezondheidsproblemen, productiviteitsverlies en uitval bij stagiairs en beginnende verpleegkundigen, met daaraan gekoppeld effectieve preventieve interventies voor in de onderwijs- en stagepraktijk. Het programma kent twee fases. 1) literatuuronderzoek, kwalitatief onderzoek naar nog onbekende risicofactoren en longitudinaal cohortonderzoek vormen de basis voor een signaleringsinstrument/predictiemodel. In het cohortonderzoek worden van 750 (aankomend) verpleegkundigen 2,5 jaar de determinanten voor uitval gemonitord. In expertmeetings selecteert men vervolgens 6 evidencebased interventies. 2) het onderzoeksteam pre-test deze interventies op eerste haalbaarheid bij studenten verpleegkunde met risico. De 2 kansrijkste interventies, één voor mentale en één voor fysieke werkbelasting, worden in pilots op effectiviteit getoetst. In het onderzoek zet men de psychometrisch beproefde meetinstrumenten in van de European Nurses Early Exit Study (online enquêtes), aangevuld met inzichten uit interviews, fysieke metingen en praktijkobservaties. Beoogde resultaten De beoogde resultaten van het project zijn: " inzicht in de fysieke en mentale problemen van verpleegkundigen; " een gevalideerd predictiemodel voor geïndiceerde preventie in de zorg; " good practices en een kant-en-klare webapplicatie voor vroegsignalering met interventies in het stageonderwijs en het werkveld om uitval te voorkomen; " valorisatie van kennis in co-creatie met studenten, zorginstellingen en zorgprofessionals in de regio; " kennisinput voor de opleidingen Nurse practitioner, Verpleegkunde, Arbeid en Gezondheid, HRM. Een grote groep studenten is respondent in het onderzoek. In de uitvoering participeren ook studenten en daarnaast onder meer lectoren, onderzoekers en docenten van Hogeschool Rotterdam en twee promovendi. Voor de wetenschappelijke disseminatie worden refereerbijeenkomsten en presentaties gehouden op internationale congressen, en proefschriften en artikelen geschreven gepubliceerd. De verspreiding onder maatschappelijke partners gebeurt via vakpublicaties, expertmeetings en een slotsymposium. Met internationale partners uit het netwerk worden mogelijkheden verkend voor internationale parallelstudies.