Startseite The effectiveness of scenario-based learning to develop patient safety behavior in first year nursing students
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The effectiveness of scenario-based learning to develop patient safety behavior in first year nursing students

  • Derya Uzelli Yilmaz EMAIL logo , Esra Akin Palandoken , Burcu Ceylan und Ayşe Akbiyik
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 18. September 2020

Abstract

The aim of this study was to examine the effect of scenario-based learning (SBL) compared to traditional demonstration method on the development of patient safety behavior in first year nursing students. During the 2016–2017 academic year, the Fundamentals of Nursing course curriculum contained the teaching of demonstration method (n=168). In the academic year 2017–2018 was performed with SBL method in the same context (n=183). Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) that assesses the same three skills was implemented in both academic terms to provide standardization so that students could evaluated in terms of patient safety competency. It was found that students’ performance of some of the steps assessed were not consistently between the demonstration and SBL methods across the three skills. There was a statistically significant difference between demonstration method and SBL method for students’ performing the skill steps related to patient safety in intramuscular injection (p<0.05) Our results suggest that the integration of SBL into the nursing skills training may be used as a method of teaching in order to the development of patient safety skills.


Corresponding author: Derya Uzelli Yilmazr, McMaster University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Medicine Hamilton, Hamilton, ON, Canada; and Izmir Katip Celebi University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Fundamentals of Nursing, Izmir, Turkey. E-mail:

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank the contribution of all the students who participated in the study. The authors would like to thank Shamara Nadarajah for English proofreading of the manuscript.

  1. Research Funding: No any financial and personal relationships with other people or organizations was used in this study.

  2. Author contributions: All authors have accepted responsibility for the entire content of this manuscript and approved its submission.

  3. Competing interests: Authors state no conflict of interest.

  4. Informed consent: Informed consent was obtained from all individuals included in this study.

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Received: 2020-03-06
Accepted: 2020-07-24
Published Online: 2020-09-18

© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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