Development of caring behaviour in undergraduate nursing students participating in a caring behaviour course

Author:

Mårtensson Sophie12,Knutsson Susanne23,Hodges Eric A.4,Sherwood Gwen4,Broström Anders56ORCID,Björk Maria25

Affiliation:

1. School of Health Sciences University of Skövde Skövde Sweden

2. CHILD Research Group Jönköping University Jönköping Sweden

3. Faculty of Health and Life Sciences Department of Health and Caring Sciences Linnaeus University Växjö Sweden

4. School of Nursing The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

5. Department of Nursing Science School of Health and Welfare Jönköping University Jönköping Sweden

6. Department of Clinical Neurophysiology Linköping University Hospital Linköping Sweden

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIn today's complex healthcare organisations there is an increasing recognition of the need to enhance care quality and patient safety. Nurses' competence in demonstrating caring behaviour during patient encounters affects how patients experience and participate in their care. Nurse educators are faced with the challenge of balancing the demand for increasingly complex knowledge and skills with facilitating students' abilities essential to becoming compassionate and caring nurses.AimThe aim was to describe undergraduate nursing students' development of caring behaviour while participating in a caring behaviour course.MethodThis pilot study used a quantitative observational design. At a university in Sweden, video‐recorded observational data from twenty‐five students were collected in the first and last weeks of a full‐time five‐week Caring Behaviour Course (the CBC). In total, 56‐min video‐recorded simulation interactions between a student and a standardised patient were coded by a credentialed coder using a timed‐event sequential continuous coding method based on the Caring Behaviour Coding Scheme (the CBCS). The CBCS maps the five conceptual domains described in Swanson's Theory of Caring with related sub‐domains that align with Swanson's qualities ofthe Compassionate Healerandthe Competent Practitioner. The CBCS contains seventeen verbal and eight non‐verbal behavioural codes, categorised as caring or non‐caring.ResultsBetween the two simulations, most verbal caring behaviours increased, and most non‐verbal caring behaviours decreased. Statistically significant differences between the simulations occurred in the sub‐domainsAvoiding assumptionsandPerforming competently/skilfullyin the quality of theCompetent Practitioner. Most observed caring behaviours aligned with theCompassionate Healer.ConclusionGenerally, the students' development of caring behaviours increased while participating in the CBC. Using a structured observational behavioural coding scheme can assist educators in assessing caring behaviour both in education and in practice, supporting caring as the universal foundation of nursing and a key to patient safety.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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