医院志愿服务对护理专业学生和医科学生移情能力的影响

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING
Mary-Ellen Barker , Jennie King , Brett Mitchell , Amanda Dawson , Gary Crowfoot
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景移情护理有利于患者和医疗服务提供者。有证据表明,接受医疗保健教育的学生自我报告的移情能力有所下降。该研究旨在调查医院志愿服务干预的可行性及其对护理和医学专业本科生移情水平的影响。研究还旨在探究他们的干预体验,并确定学生们认为可以改善患者安全的领域。方法学生们通过参加 "志愿者体验计划",在当地的地区医院获得了志愿服务的初步体验。杰斐逊移情量表--卫生专业学生问卷用于测量学生在项目前后的移情得分。对开放式问题的回答进行了主题分析,以评估学生的体验并确定学生报告的患者安全改进领域。干预后,学生的移情平均得分从 112.03 (95% CI 107.56, 116.5) 提高到 117.38 (95% CI 113.76, 121.00) p < 0.001,有统计学意义。通过分组分析发现,医科学生的移情得分提高幅度大于护理专业学生。主题分析揭示了项目的潜在益处,包括对患者体验的新视角、患者沟通信心的提高、更强的职业认同感以及有益的体验。结论 志愿者体验计划是可行的,它使护理专业和医科专业的学生能够在临床教学之外与病人建立联系。它似乎提高了本科生的移情水平,有助于他们提供富有同情心、以人为本的医疗服务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The effect of hospital volunteering on empathy in nursing and medical students

Background

Empathic care benefits patients and healthcare providers. There is evidence of self-reported empathy decline among students in healthcare education. Hospital volunteering could assist undergraduate healthcare students to develop empathetic relationships with patients.

Aim

The study aimed to investigate the feasibility and effect of a hospital volunteering intervention on the empathy levels of undergraduate nursing and medical students. It further aimed to explore their experience of the intervention and determine student-identified areas for patient safety improvements.

Design

Pre–post-intervention study

Setting

A large outer metropolitan hospital in New South Wales, Australia.

Participants

Twenty-nine (n = 29) undergraduate nursing and medical students from an Australian university.

Methods

Students had an introductory experience of volunteering at their local district hospital through participation in the ‘Volunteer Taster Program’. The Jefferson Scale of Empathy-Health Professions Student questionnaire was used to measure student empathy scores pre and post program. Responses to open-ended questions were thematically analysed to evaluate student experiences and identify student-reported areas for patient safety improvements.

Results

Twenty-nine students (18 nursing, 11 medical) completed the program. Students had statistically significant improvements in post-intervention mean empathy scores 112.03 (95% CI 107.56, 116.5) to 117.38 (95% CI 113.76, 121.00) p < 0.001. Subgroup analysis identified a larger increase in empathy scores among medical students than nursing students. The thematic analysis revealed potential program benefits, including new perspectives of the patient experience, improved confidence in patient communication, a stronger professional identity, and a rewarding experience. Identified patient safety issues included concerns for patients’ emotional and physical well-being, and patient communication.

Conclusions

The Volunteer Taster Program is feasible and enabled nursing and medical students to connect with patients outside the sphere of clinical education. It appears to increase empathy levels in undergraduate students and could assist them to deliver empathetic, person-centred healthcare.

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来源期刊
Collegian
Collegian NURSING-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
127
审稿时长
72 days
期刊介绍: Collegian: The Australian Journal of Nursing Practice, Scholarship and Research is the official journal of Australian College of Nursing (ACN). The journal aims to reflect the broad interests of nurses and the nursing profession, and to challenge nurses on emerging areas of interest. It publishes research articles and scholarly discussion of nursing practice, policy and professional issues. Papers published in the journal are peer reviewed by a double blind process using reviewers who meet high standards of academic and clinical expertise. Invited papers that contribute to nursing knowledge and debate are published at the discretion of the Editor. The journal, online only from 2016, is available to members of ACN and also by separate subscription. ACN believes that each and every nurse in Australia should have the opportunity to grow their career through quality education, and further our profession through representation. ACN is the voice of influence, providing the nursing expertise and experience required when government and key stakeholders are deciding the future of health.
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