Home Effectiveness of an Evidence-Based Curriculum Module in Nursing Schools Targeting Safe Patient Handling and Movement
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Effectiveness of an Evidence-Based Curriculum Module in Nursing Schools Targeting Safe Patient Handling and Movement

  • Audrey L. Nelson , Thomas R Waters , Nancy N. Menzel , Nancy Hughes , Pamela C Hagan , Gail Powell-Cope , Carol Sedlak and Vivian Thompson
Published/Copyright: December 10, 2007

Nursing schools in the United States have not been teaching evidence-based practices for safe patient handling, putting their graduates at risk for musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs). The specific aim of this study was to translate research related to safe patient handling into the curricula of nursing schools and evaluate the impact on nurse educators and students' intentions to use safe patient handling techniques. Nurse educators at 26 nursing schools received curricular materials and training; nursing students received the evidence-based curriculum module. There were three control sites. Questionnaires were used to collect data on knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about safe patient handling for both nurse educators and students, pre- and post-training. In this study, we found that nurse educator and student knowledge improved significantly at intervention schools, as did intention to use mechanical lifting devices in the near future. We concluded that the curriculum module is ready for wide dissemination across nursing schools to reduce the risk of MSDs among nurses.

Published Online: 2007-12-10

©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Editorial
  2. Fostering Future Nursing Professionals: It's a Matter of Values
  3. Article
  4. The Power of Online Role-Play Simulations: Technology in Nursing Education
  5. Comparing Teaching Practices about Humor among Nursing Faculty: An International Collaborative Study
  6. Bringing Theory to Life: Engaging Nursing Students in a Collaborative Population-Based Screening Project
  7. Exploring the Use of Clinical Laboratories in Undergraduate Nursing Programs in Regional Australia
  8. Locating Carper's Aesthetic Pattern of Knowing within Contemporary Nursing Evidence, Praxis and Theory
  9. Practicing What We Preach: Balancing Teaching and Clinical Practice Competencies
  10. International Dimensions of Higher Education in Nursing in Canada: Tapping the Wisdom of the 20th Century While Embracing Possibilities for the 21st Century
  11. Measuring Clinical Practice Parameters with Human Patient Simulation: A Pilot Study
  12. Nursing Graduates' Perceptions of Their Undergraduate Clinical Placement
  13. When West Meets East: A Short-Term Immersion Experience in South Korea
  14. Teaching Psychomotor Skills to Beginning Nursing Students Using a Web-Enhanced Approach: A Quasi-Experimental Study
  15. Design and Testing of Classroom and Clinical Teaching Evaluation Tools for Nursing Education
  16. The Experiences of Irish Nurse Lecturers Role Transition from Clinician to Educator
  17. Attitudes and Values of Nurse Educators: An International Survey
  18. Using Literature and the Arts to Teach Nursing
  19. Working with Standardized Patients: A Primer
  20. Adult Learner Centered Processes in an Online ADRN to BSN Nursing Program: Independent Evaluator and Peer Self-Assessments
  21. Taking the Patient to the Classroom: Applying Theoretical Frameworks to Simulation in Nursing Education
  22. Preceptorship and Mentorship: Not Merely a Matter of Semantics
  23. Art as a Scaffolding Teaching Strategy in Baccalaureate Nursing Education
  24. Improving Preceptor Self-Efficacy Using an Online Educational Program
  25. A Comparison of Clinical Simulation and Case Study Presentation on Nurse Practitioner Students' Knowledge and Confidence in Managing a Cardiac Event
  26. Psychometric Properties of the Chinese Leadership Practices Inventory
  27. Measures of Homophobia among Nursing Students and Faculty: A Midwestern Perspective
  28. Outcomes of ADN-BSN Partnerships to Increase Baccalaureate Prepared Nurses
  29. Effectiveness of an Evidence-Based Curriculum Module in Nursing Schools Targeting Safe Patient Handling and Movement
Downloaded on 10.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.2202/1548-923X.1486/html
Scroll to top button