Author:
Sutherland Jodi L.,Palmer Deborah,Sprague Lori,Si Bing,Rababa Salahaldeen
Abstract
Demand for home care has increased due to the expansion of preventive care, people living longer with chronic conditions, and the need for healthcare services as the baby boom population ages. Nurses must be prepared to meet the needs of patients and families in the home setting. Home care nursing simulations have been utilized as a teaching-learning strategy in baccalaureate nursing education, yet less is known about their use with practicing home care nurses and associate degree nursing students. The purpose of this pilot study using simulation was to prepare practicing nurses and student nurses to respond using nursing skills and clinical judgment. The convenience sample consisted of associate degree nursing students (n = 9), practicing home healthcare nurses (n = 8), and nursing faculty (n = 2). The Simulation Effectiveness Tool - Modified (SET-M) Survey (Leighton et al., 2015) was utilized for data collection. Participants perceived the home healthcare simulation to be an effective practice experience with high overall agreement for Pre-briefing, Scenario-Confidence, Scenario-Learning, and Debriefing. The findings of this study provide data to support partnerships to provide home care simulation experiences for associate degree nursing students and practicing home care nurses.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)