Jina Kim1, Ogcheol Lee2. 1. Red Cross College of Nursing, Chung-Ang University, 84 Heukseok-Ro, Dongjak-Gu 06974, Seoul, Republic of Korea. Electronic address: jinaword@cau.ac.kr. 2. Red Cross College of Nursing, Chung-Ang University, 84 Heukseok-Ro, Dongjak-Gu 06974, Seoul, Republic of Korea. Electronic address: leeoc@cau.ac.kr.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The necessity of disaster preparedness among nursing students has been continuously emphasized. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to verify the effectiveness of a simulation-based education program for nursing students responding to mass casualty incidents (MCI) from the perspectives of triage accuracy, response attitude, teamwork, and program satisfaction. DESIGN: This study employed a pre-post intervention design. SETTINGS: Disaster Simulation Lab and a debriefing room in the University Nursing Simulation Center in South Korea. PARTICIPANTS: The participants were 34 graduating nursing students attending a university in Seoul. METHODS: The program consisted of lectures on disaster nursing, group discussions, practice, debriefings, and a pre- and post-test, conducted over 180 min. Simulation-based training was conducted using the Emergo Train System®. The simulation environment comprised pre-hospital and hospital sections, with videos displayed on a large screen and sound effects played on loudspeakers. RESULTS: Participants were likely to undertriage. There was a significant increase in positive attitudes after the intervention (p < .001). Self-reported teamwork was high, and among its subfactors, "leadership and team coordination" scored the highest. Participants' satisfaction with the program was high (4.5/5.0). CONCLUSIONS: The simulation-based MCI program was effective in boosting positive attitudes among nursing students. In future, comparative studies including control groups and different instructional methods should be conducted. A patient bank should also be developed considering participants' knowledge levels and the circumstances of each country.
BACKGROUND: The necessity of disaster preparedness among nursing students has been continuously emphasized. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to verify the effectiveness of a simulation-based education program for nursing students responding to mass casualty incidents (MCI) from the perspectives of triage accuracy, response attitude, teamwork, and program satisfaction. DESIGN: This study employed a pre-post intervention design. SETTINGS: Disaster Simulation Lab and a debriefing room in the University Nursing Simulation Center in South Korea. PARTICIPANTS: The participants were 34 graduating nursing students attending a university in Seoul. METHODS: The program consisted of lectures on disaster nursing, group discussions, practice, debriefings, and a pre- and post-test, conducted over 180 min. Simulation-based training was conducted using the Emergo Train System®. The simulation environment comprised pre-hospital and hospital sections, with videos displayed on a large screen and sound effects played on loudspeakers. RESULTS:Participants were likely to undertriage. There was a significant increase in positive attitudes after the intervention (p < .001). Self-reported teamwork was high, and among its subfactors, "leadership and team coordination" scored the highest. Participants' satisfaction with the program was high (4.5/5.0). CONCLUSIONS: The simulation-based MCI program was effective in boosting positive attitudes among nursing students. In future, comparative studies including control groups and different instructional methods should be conducted. A patient bank should also be developed considering participants' knowledge levels and the circumstances of each country.
Authors: María Del Mar Requena-Mullor; Raquel Alarcón-Rodríguez; María Isabel Ventura-Miranda; Jessica García-González Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2021-02-03 Impact factor: 3.390
Authors: Michel Paul Johan Teuben; Carsten Mand; Laura Moosdorf; Kai Sprengel; Alba Shehu; Roman Pfeifer; Steffen Ruchholtz; Rolf Lefering; Hans-Christoph Pape; Kai Oliver Jensen Journal: World J Surg Date: 2021-03-29 Impact factor: 3.352