Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore undergraduate nursing students’ perceptions of their clinical learning experience, and the reported findings emerged from narratives of their experience. Design: This...Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore undergraduate nursing students’ perceptions of their clinical learning experience, and the reported findings emerged from narratives of their experience. Design: This was a hermeneutic phenomenological study which took place at a university nursing college in Malawi. Participants for the study were purposively selected from third- and fourth-year undergraduate nursing students and the data were collected through in-depth interviews. A framework developed by modifying Colaizzi’s procedural steps guided the phenomenological analysis. Findings: The study reveals factors which cause stress among undergraduate nursing students during their clinical practice. The following themes emerged from the study: lecturer/nurse interaction with students: stress associated with patient care and stress associated with objective structured clinical examination (OSCE). The lecturer is perceived to significantly induce stress, and this is common when the student perceives that the lecturer’s interaction is in a “policing” manner. The primary stressors associated with patient care include lack of life-saving medication which sometimes leads to death of a patient, taking care of critically ill patients unsupervised, and fear of contracting infections such as HIV and tuberculosis, and death of a patient. Factors associated with stress during OSCE include use of examiners whom students are not familiar with and the conduct of OSCE in the skills lab which has better resources than the clinical settings where students practice. Conclusions: The study reveals sources of stress during nursing students’ clinical practice and its effects on their learning and motivation. Consistent with existing literature, these findings confirm that nursing students experience considerable levels of stress during clinical practice. Recommendations: The study suggests that nursing education can be quite a stressful experience to the learners. It is therefore essential that nurse educators should address the various sources of stress which the study has revealed to enhance students’ clinical learning and provide the student nurses with the needed care.展开更多
Purpose: Nursing profession is considered as a stressful and demanding job. The purpose of this research was to determine stressors types and degrees over two data collection periods in 2015-2016. Methods: This is a q...Purpose: Nursing profession is considered as a stressful and demanding job. The purpose of this research was to determine stressors types and degrees over two data collection periods in 2015-2016. Methods: This is a quantitative descriptive research study. A purposive sample of 55 female nursing students (complete 4th year cohort) from Princess Nourah University took part in this study. Results: The results highlight that the most influential cause of stress were factors related to taking care of patients, teachers and nursing staff. Moreover, nursing students reported increased level of stress comparing them in two different time periods. Conclusions: To overcome these clinical stressors, it requires students to be equipped with competent knowledge, skills and experience in dealing with the changing needs of patients’ condition. Future research should explore nursing students’ beliefs and causes of stress and how it can be avoided by conducting a qualitative research study.展开更多
Objective: To validate the Stressors in Nursing Students Scale-Chinese Version(SINS-CN) in a population of Macao nursing students. Methods: A methodological study was designed with 2 phases. In phase 1, a three-ex...Objective: To validate the Stressors in Nursing Students Scale-Chinese Version(SINS-CN) in a population of Macao nursing students. Methods: A methodological study was designed with 2 phases. In phase 1, a three-expert panel was invited to evaluate the content validity of SINS-CN, and then its test-retest reliability was examined over a 2-week interval. In phase 2,211 undergraduate nursing students were recruited, and 203 valid responses to the questionnaire were obtained. A principal component analysis with varimax rotation was applied to validate the structure of the instrument. Results: The content validity index(CVI) was 0.89. The correlation coefficient of the test-retest reliability was 0.82 for the overall instrument and 0.70-0.88 for the instrument's sub-dimensions. Based on the 43 items of the instrument, five components were identified and accounted for 60. 28% of the variance with eigenvalues ranging from 1.32 to 10. 18. The factor loadings were 0.42-0.79. The internal consistency reliability of Cronbach's ot was 0.96 for the overall scale and 0.67-0.94 for its sub-dimensions. Conclusion: The study findings indicated that SINS-CN had acceptable psychometric properties in terms of content validity, stability and internal consistency reliability. The principal component analysis generated a 5-component structure with 43 items; this was slightly different from the origi- nai structure but was more applicable to the studied population, which suggests that this instrument has cross-cultural sensitivity.展开更多
文摘Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore undergraduate nursing students’ perceptions of their clinical learning experience, and the reported findings emerged from narratives of their experience. Design: This was a hermeneutic phenomenological study which took place at a university nursing college in Malawi. Participants for the study were purposively selected from third- and fourth-year undergraduate nursing students and the data were collected through in-depth interviews. A framework developed by modifying Colaizzi’s procedural steps guided the phenomenological analysis. Findings: The study reveals factors which cause stress among undergraduate nursing students during their clinical practice. The following themes emerged from the study: lecturer/nurse interaction with students: stress associated with patient care and stress associated with objective structured clinical examination (OSCE). The lecturer is perceived to significantly induce stress, and this is common when the student perceives that the lecturer’s interaction is in a “policing” manner. The primary stressors associated with patient care include lack of life-saving medication which sometimes leads to death of a patient, taking care of critically ill patients unsupervised, and fear of contracting infections such as HIV and tuberculosis, and death of a patient. Factors associated with stress during OSCE include use of examiners whom students are not familiar with and the conduct of OSCE in the skills lab which has better resources than the clinical settings where students practice. Conclusions: The study reveals sources of stress during nursing students’ clinical practice and its effects on their learning and motivation. Consistent with existing literature, these findings confirm that nursing students experience considerable levels of stress during clinical practice. Recommendations: The study suggests that nursing education can be quite a stressful experience to the learners. It is therefore essential that nurse educators should address the various sources of stress which the study has revealed to enhance students’ clinical learning and provide the student nurses with the needed care.
文摘Purpose: Nursing profession is considered as a stressful and demanding job. The purpose of this research was to determine stressors types and degrees over two data collection periods in 2015-2016. Methods: This is a quantitative descriptive research study. A purposive sample of 55 female nursing students (complete 4th year cohort) from Princess Nourah University took part in this study. Results: The results highlight that the most influential cause of stress were factors related to taking care of patients, teachers and nursing staff. Moreover, nursing students reported increased level of stress comparing them in two different time periods. Conclusions: To overcome these clinical stressors, it requires students to be equipped with competent knowledge, skills and experience in dealing with the changing needs of patients’ condition. Future research should explore nursing students’ beliefs and causes of stress and how it can be avoided by conducting a qualitative research study.
基金supported by Macao Polytechnic Institute Research Fund(Code:RP/ESS-03/2012)
文摘Objective: To validate the Stressors in Nursing Students Scale-Chinese Version(SINS-CN) in a population of Macao nursing students. Methods: A methodological study was designed with 2 phases. In phase 1, a three-expert panel was invited to evaluate the content validity of SINS-CN, and then its test-retest reliability was examined over a 2-week interval. In phase 2,211 undergraduate nursing students were recruited, and 203 valid responses to the questionnaire were obtained. A principal component analysis with varimax rotation was applied to validate the structure of the instrument. Results: The content validity index(CVI) was 0.89. The correlation coefficient of the test-retest reliability was 0.82 for the overall instrument and 0.70-0.88 for the instrument's sub-dimensions. Based on the 43 items of the instrument, five components were identified and accounted for 60. 28% of the variance with eigenvalues ranging from 1.32 to 10. 18. The factor loadings were 0.42-0.79. The internal consistency reliability of Cronbach's ot was 0.96 for the overall scale and 0.67-0.94 for its sub-dimensions. Conclusion: The study findings indicated that SINS-CN had acceptable psychometric properties in terms of content validity, stability and internal consistency reliability. The principal component analysis generated a 5-component structure with 43 items; this was slightly different from the origi- nai structure but was more applicable to the studied population, which suggests that this instrument has cross-cultural sensitivity.