| Literature DB >> 32883816 |
Nancy Wingo, Christopher R Jones, Bethany R Pittman, Trevor Purter, Madeline Russell, Janet Brown, Sigrid Ladores.
Abstract
Nursing faculty at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) incorporated design thinking (DT) into the curriculum of the UAB School of Nursing Honors Program as a framework for undergraduate students' immersion into research experiences. This article describes the experiences of students who participated in the first honors class that used DT and discusses how to incorporate DT into nursing research and quality improvement projects. Active learning strategies provided students various opportunities to conceptualize and apply the five-step DT process by identifying possible solutions to problems in clinical settings. Three major themes emerged from these reflections: trusting the process, cultivating empathy, and applying DT in the future. Students found that trusting the process of learning about DT facilitated their understanding of empathy's role in health care as they recognized DT's far-reaching applications beyond the honors program. A pragmatic, intuitive, and innovative approach to identifying problems and solutions, DT empowers nurses to creatively and confidently address issues they encounter to improve outcomes for their patients, health-care systems, and communities. © Copyright 2020 Creative Health Care Management.Entities:
Keywords: design thinking; empathy; innovative health care; undergraduate nursing education
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32883816 DOI: 10.1891/CRNR-D-19-00055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Creat Nurs ISSN: 1078-4535