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Integration of a Hospice Clinical Experience
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Prelicensure nursing programs have been slow to integrate end-of-life care into their curricula. In those prelicensure nursing programs that do offer courses on end-of-life care, student outcomes include positive attitudes toward dying patients. This mixed-method study had 2 purposes: first to compare 2 teaching strategies, hospice simulation and hospice clinical. The second purpose of this study was to strengthen understanding of the attitudes and perceptions of nursing students caring for dying patients and their families in both simulated and hospice clinical settings. Fourth-year nursing students enrolled in a Medical-Surgical Nursing III course participated in the study (n = 134). Participants were placed in an inpatient hospice clinical setting or a hospice simulation. Students completed the Frommelt Attitudes Toward Care of the Dying Scale and a reflection journal, before and after the assigned clinical or hospice day. Thematic analysis of the reflection journals was conducted. Key phrases and themes were identified, and the major themes were described. Prior to the hospice clinical or simulated educational experience, students reported feeling anxious caring for a dying patient or a patient who has just died. After the hospice clinical or simulation, students reported feeling more comfortable discussing end-of-life preferences with the patient and interdisciplinary team.
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Title: Integration of a Hospice Clinical Experience
Description:
Prelicensure nursing programs have been slow to integrate end-of-life care into their curricula.
In those prelicensure nursing programs that do offer courses on end-of-life care, student outcomes include positive attitudes toward dying patients.
This mixed-method study had 2 purposes: first to compare 2 teaching strategies, hospice simulation and hospice clinical.
The second purpose of this study was to strengthen understanding of the attitudes and perceptions of nursing students caring for dying patients and their families in both simulated and hospice clinical settings.
Fourth-year nursing students enrolled in a Medical-Surgical Nursing III course participated in the study (n = 134).
Participants were placed in an inpatient hospice clinical setting or a hospice simulation.
Students completed the Frommelt Attitudes Toward Care of the Dying Scale and a reflection journal, before and after the assigned clinical or hospice day.
Thematic analysis of the reflection journals was conducted.
Key phrases and themes were identified, and the major themes were described.
Prior to the hospice clinical or simulated educational experience, students reported feeling anxious caring for a dying patient or a patient who has just died.
After the hospice clinical or simulation, students reported feeling more comfortable discussing end-of-life preferences with the patient and interdisciplinary team.
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