| Literature DB >> 35778726 |
Gudrun Rohde1,2, Berit Johannessen3, Markus Maaseide3, Sylvi Flateland3, Anne V Skisland3, Ellen B Moi3, Kristin Haraldstad3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic mandated the reconstruction of educational programs globally. For nursing students in need of practical learning and training as a part of their curriculum, the pandemic also caused restrictions and alterations in practical placements and limited access to simulation training at campuses. The aim of this study is therefore, to describe and explore how the COVID- 19 pandemic influenced baccalaureate nursing students' experiences of learning and their social life as a student.Entities:
Keywords: Baccalaureate nursing students; COVID-19 pandemic; Learning; Mixed method
Year: 2022 PMID: 35778726 PMCID: PMC9247899 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-022-00955-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Characteristics of the baccalaureate nursing students at University of Agder (N = 396) organized by school year
| Total | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Years in nursing school | |||||
1 2 3 | 142 (36%) 127 (32%) 127 (32%) | ||||
| Age, years | |||||
< 25 25–29 ≥ 30 | 278 (70%) 46 (12%) 72 (18%) | 112 (79%) 11 (8%) 19 (13%) | 86 (65) 26 (20%) 15 (12%) | 80 (63%) 20 (16%) 27 (21%) | 0.056 |
| Living alone | |||||
No Yes | 332 (84%) 64 (16%) | 120 (85%) 22 (15%) | 108 (85%) 19 (15%) | 104 (82%) 23 (18%) | 0.764 |
| Number of times tested for COVID-19 | |||||
Never 1 2 3 ≥ 4 | 154 (39%) 124 (31%) 60 (15%) 40 (10%) 18 (5%) | 58 (41%) 44 (31%) 15 (11%) 16 (11%) 9 (6%) | 46 (36%) 42 (33%) 27 (21%) 10 (8%) 2 (2%) | 50 (39%) 38 (30%) 18 (14%) 14 (11%) 7 (6%) | 0.237 |
| Quarantine status related to COVID-19 | |||||
Never Previous Now | 236 (60%) 157 (39%) 3 (1%) | 77(54%) 63 (44%) 2 (2%) | 78 (61%) 48 (38%) 1 (1%) | 81 (64%) 46 (36%) 0 | 0.383 |
| At risk for COVID-19 complications | |||||
No Uncertain Yes | 49 (10%) 323 (82%) 33 (8%) | 16 (11%) 114 (80%) 12 (9%) | 16 (13%) 103 (81%) 8 (6%) | 8 (6%) 106 (84%) 13 (10%) | 0.397 |
| Trust in governmental handling of the COVID-19 situation | |||||
Strongly disagree/disagree Neither disagree nor agree Agree Strongly agree | 36 (9%) 44 (18%) 200 (50%) 89 (22%) | 14 (6%) 30 (21%) 67 (47%) 31 (22%) | 4 (3%) 29 (23%) 68 (53%) 26 (20%) | 18 (14%) 12 (9%) 65 (51%) 32 (25%) | 0.016 |
| Trust in universities’ handling of the COVID-19 situation | |||||
Strongly disagree Disagree Neither disagree nor agree Agree Strongly agree | 18 (4%) 44 (11%) 112 (28%) 180 (46%) 42 (11%) | 5 (4%) 17 (12%) 37 (26%) 67 (47%) 16 (11%) | 4 (3%) 17 (13%) 47 (37%) 50 (39%) 28 (22%) | 9 (7%) 10 (8%) 28 (22%) 63 (50%) 17 (13%) | 0.080 |
| Concern about the quality of education | |||||
Strongly disagree Disagree Neither disagree nor agree Agree Strongly agree | 22 (5%) 34 (9%) 64 (16%) 142 (36%) 134 (34%) | 3 (2%) 6 (4%) 17 (12%) 50 (35%) 66 (47%) | 6 (5%) 13 (10%) 21 (17%) 40 (31%) 47 (37%) | 13 (10%) 15 (12%) 26 (21%) 52 (41%) 21 (16%) | < 0.001 |
| Fear of COVID-19 (Mean (SD)) | 2.3 (0.7) | 2.5 (0.8) | 2.3 (0.7) | 2.2 (0.7) | 0.026 |
| Feeling lonely due to COVID-19 | |||||
Strongly disagree Disagree Neither disagree nor agree Agree Strongly agree | 33 (8%) 61 (15%) 80 (20%) 130 (32%) 92 (23%) | 8 (6%) 16 (11%) 23 (16%) 53 (37%) 42 (30%) | 10 (8%) 21 (16%) 28 (22%) 40 (32%) 28 (22%) | 15 (12%) 24 (19%) 29 (23%) 37 (29%) 22 (17%) | 0.096 |
| Engagement in clinical practice during the pandemic | |||||
Yes No | 246 (62%) 150 (38%) | 12 (9%) 130 (91%) | 117 (92%) 10 (8%) | 127 (92%) 10 (8%) | < 0.001 |
| Have you during the pandemic been in contact with patients with the following situation? | |||||
Patients with unclear COVID-19 status Patients with confirmed COVID-19 infection Both (unclear and/or confirmed) None of them | 148 (61%) 7 (3%) 35 (15%) 52 (21%) | 3 1 0 6 | 64 (55%) 2 (2%) 11 (9%) 39 (34%) | 81 (70%) 4 (3%) 24 (21%) 7 (6%) | < 0.001 |
| Self-imposed quarantine during clinical practice | |||||
Yes No | 105 (43%) 137 (57%) | 2 8 | 43 (37%) 73 (63%) | 60 (52%) 56 (48%) | 0.025 |
*Categorical data are presented as number (%) and continuous variables as mean (SD). Chi-square tests were used to compare differences in categorical variables and ANOVA tests for continuous data
Learnings outcomes in clinical practice of second- and third-year (N = 254) baccalaureate nursing students at University of Agder
| Necessary knowledge of infection control | Concerns about getting infected during clinical practice | Concerns about infecting patients during clinical practice | Concerns about high absenteeism during clinical practice | Concerns about completion of clinical practice | Fewer learning situations during clinical practice | Insufficient guidance during clinical practice | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strongly disagree | 4 (2%) | 14 (6%) | 6 (2%) | 14 (6%) | 8 (3%) | 34 (14%) | 54 (22%) |
| Disagree | 20 (8%) | 30 (12%) | 23 (10%) | 12 (5%) | 8 (3%) | 46 (19%) | 84 (35%) |
| Neither disagree nor agree | 39 (16%) | 31 (13%) | 7 (3%) | 19 (8%) | 14 (6%) | 39 (16%) | 45 (18%) |
| Agree | 127 (53%) | 98 (40%) | 87 (36%) | 61 (25%) | 67 (28%) | 76 (31%) | 38 (16%) |
| Strongly agree | 52 (21%) | 69 (29%) | 119 (49%) | 136 (56%) | 145 (60%) | 47 (19%) | 21 (9%) |
No significant differences between year 2 and year 3 students were identified
Fig. 1Main themes and subthemes of how the covid 19 pandemic influenced baccalaureate nursing students’ experiences of learning