Austyn Snowden1, Rosie Stenhouse2, Lorraine Duers3, Sarah Marshall1, Fiona Carver1, Norrie Brown1, Jenny Young1. 1. School of Health and Social Care, Sighthill Campus, Edinburgh Napier University, Edinburgh, UK. 2. School of Health in Social Science, Medical School, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK. 3. School of Health Nursing and Midwifery, University of the West of Scotland, Hamilton Campus, Hamilton, UK.
Abstract
AIM: To examine the relationship between baseline emotional intelligence and prior caring experience with completion of pre-registration nurse and midwifery education. BACKGROUND: Selection and retention of nursing students is a global challenge. Emotional intelligence is well-conceptualized, measurable and an intuitive prerequisite to nursing values and so might be a useful selection criterion. Previous caring experience may also be associated with successful completion of nurse training. DESIGN: Prospective longitudinal study. METHOD: Self-report trait and ability emotional intelligence scores were obtained from 876 student nurses from two Scottish Universities before they began training in 2013. Data on previous caring experience were recorded. Relationships between these metrics and successful completion of the course were calculated in SPSS version 23. RESULTS: Nurses completing their programme scored significantly higher on trait emotional intelligence than those that did not complete their programme. Nurses completing their programme also scored significantly higher on social connection scores than those that did not. There was no relationship between "ability" emotional intelligence and completion. Previous caring experience was not statistically significantly related to completion. CONCLUSION: Students with higher baseline trait emotional intelligence scores were statistically more likely to complete training than those with lower scores. This relationship also held using "Social connection" scores. At best, previous caring experience made no difference to students' chances of completing training. Caution is urged when interpreting these results because the headline findings mask considerable heterogeneity. Neither previous caring experience or global emotional intelligence measures should be used in isolation to recruit nurses.
AIM: To examine the relationship between baseline emotional intelligence and prior caring experience with completion of pre-registration nurse and midwifery education. BACKGROUND: Selection and retention of nursing students is a global challenge. Emotional intelligence is well-conceptualized, measurable and an intuitive prerequisite to nursing values and so might be a useful selection criterion. Previous caring experience may also be associated with successful completion of nurse training. DESIGN: Prospective longitudinal study. METHOD: Self-report trait and ability emotional intelligence scores were obtained from 876 student nurses from two Scottish Universities before they began training in 2013. Data on previous caring experience were recorded. Relationships between these metrics and successful completion of the course were calculated in SPSS version 23. RESULTS: Nurses completing their programme scored significantly higher on trait emotional intelligence than those that did not complete their programme. Nurses completing their programme also scored significantly higher on social connection scores than those that did not. There was no relationship between "ability" emotional intelligence and completion. Previous caring experience was not statistically significantly related to completion. CONCLUSION: Students with higher baseline trait emotional intelligence scores were statistically more likely to complete training than those with lower scores. This relationship also held using "Social connection" scores. At best, previous caring experience made no difference to students' chances of completing training. Caution is urged when interpreting these results because the headline findings mask considerable heterogeneity. Neither previous caring experience or global emotional intelligence measures should be used in isolation to recruit nurses.
Authors: Nerea Jiménez-Picón; Macarena Romero-Martín; José Antonio Ponce-Blandón; Lucia Ramirez-Baena; Juan Carlos Palomo-Lara; Juan Gómez-Salgado Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2021-05-20 Impact factor: 3.390