Abstract
Abstract
Background
The debriefing process after health care simulations should provide a psychologically safe learning environment for nursing students. Case video-based debriefing on a simulation of high-risk neonatal care can help nursing students feel psychologically safe and make learning more effective. In this study, we developed case video-based debriefing materials for a simulation of high-risk neonatal care for nursing students in South Korea and evaluated their effects.
Methods
This mixed-methods study, consisting of a survey and an in-depth interview, was conducted between August and December 2022. The participants were 27 nursing students for the development of the case video-based debriefing and 51 nursing students for the evaluation of its effects (25 in the experimental group and 26 in the control group) at a university in South Korea. A case video-based debriefing on a simulation of high-risk neonatal care was developed, and the experimental group took part in case video-based debriefing. The participants’ self-efficacy, critical thinking, state anxiety, and satisfaction with practice were examined. The experimental group’s learning experiences were explored. Quantitative data were analyzed using the chi-square test, the unpaired t-test, and repeated-measures analysis of variance. Qualitative content analysis was conducted.
Results
In the experimental group, critical thinking and satisfaction with practice increased to a greater extent than in the control group. However, the changes in self-efficacy and state anxiety were not significantly different between the experimental and control groups. Four categories were extracted from nursing students who participated in the case video-based debriefing: “learning facilitated by the simulation,” “expanded learning,” “safe learning environment,” and “efficient utilization of case videos.”
Conclusions
Case video-based debriefing on a simulation of high-risk neonatal care effectively enhanced nursing students’ critical thinking and satisfaction with practice, and it will be utilized to improve nursing students’ competency in high-risk neonatal care.
Funder
National Research Foundation of Korea
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference36 articles.
1. Korean Accreditation Board of Nursing Education. The manual of nursing education accreditation for university. Seoul: Korean Accreditation Board of Nursing Education; 2021. p. 58–9 143-145.
2. Korean Statistical Information Service. Birth by cities and provinces/ pregnancy period. Daejeon: Statistics Korea; 2021. https://kosis.kr/statisticsList/statisticsListIndex.do?menuId=M_01_01&vwcd=MT_ZTITLE&parmTabId=M_01_01&outLink=Y&entrType=#content-group. Accessed 7 Jan 2023.
3. Park YA, Kong EH, Park YJ. Head nurses’ experiences in clinical practice education of nursing students: a qualitative research. J Korean Acad Soc Nurs Educ. 2018;24(4):337–46. https://doi.org/10.5977/jkasne.2018.24.4.337.
4. Ulenaers D, Grosemans J, Schrooten W, Bergs J. Clinical placement experience of nursing students during the COVID-19 pandemic: a cross-sectional study. Nurse Educ Today. 2021;99:104746. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2021.104746.
5. Berga KA, Vadnais E, Nelson J, Johnston S, Buro K, Hu R, et al. Blended learning versus face-to-face learning in an undergraduate nursing health assessment course: a quasi-experimental study. Nurse Educ Today. 2021;96:104622. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2020.104622.