Balancing between challenges and trust: Nursing students’ experiences of participating in a course in wilderness medicine
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/21118Dato
2020-08-31Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Newly graduated nurses are expected to have acquired the knowledge and skills necessary to be safe and accountable practitioners
(Maartensson and Lofmark, ¨ 2013). Hence, nursing students should not
only develop cognitive knowledge about the what and how of nursing
skills, but also about using evidence-based nursing practice. Bergen and
Santo (2018, p. 362) defines action competence as having
self-awareness and “deeming oneself qualified and capable of working
through a problem to obtain a solution”. Action competence naturally
starts with critical thinking, but focuses on actions and may be defined
as the perceived capability to select and perform actions. When action
competence is acquired, students can approach a clinical situation by
seeking information, analyzing data, evaluating and reflecting with
peers and deciding on appropriate actions to solve a specific problem.
However, newly graduated nurses report that they lack the necessary
skills to feel confident in their work (Chesser-Smyth and Long, 2013;
Milton-Wildey et al., 2014; Ortiz, 2016) and that the transition from
student to registered nurse can be experienced as a shock (Duchscher,
2009; Murray et al., 2019). In this article, we will describe how simulations based on the concept of wilderness medicine can be used to
enhance students’ development of action competence. We will also
reflect on the possibilities to use similar teaching-learning strategies in
other outdoor contexts than those traditionally associated with wilderness medicine.
Beskrivelse
Accepted manuscript version, licensed CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
Forlag
ElsevierSitering
Evju AS, Høgbakk ML, Lindgren SJ, Wiklund Gustin L. Balancing between challenges and trust: Nursing students’ experiences of participating in a course in wilderness medicine. Nurse Education in Practice. 2020;48Metadata
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