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Clinical Virtual Simulation in Nursing Education: Randomized Controlled Trial
by
Padilha, José Miguel
, Machado, Paulo Puga
, Ramos, José
, Costa, Patrício
, Ribeiro, Ana
in
Attrition
/ Clinical assessment
/ Clinical Competence - standards
/ Clinical decision making
/ Clinical medicine
/ Clinical nursing
/ Clinical trials
/ Cognitive style
/ Communication skills
/ Decision making
/ Education
/ Education, Nursing - methods
/ Equipment and supplies
/ Female
/ Fidelity
/ Groups
/ Health care
/ Health care reform
/ Health education
/ Health services
/ Humans
/ Innovations
/ Interactive computer systems
/ Internet
/ Intervention
/ Knowledge
/ Laboratories
/ Learning
/ Likert scale
/ Male
/ Medical care
/ Medical decision making
/ Medical education
/ Multiple choice
/ Nurses
/ Nursing
/ Nursing education
/ Nursing schools
/ Objectives
/ Original Paper
/ Patients
/ Pedagogy
/ Performance evaluation
/ Physiology
/ Quality management
/ Reasoning
/ Recreation
/ Satisfaction
/ Self image
/ Self-efficacy
/ Simulated clients
/ Simulation
/ Skills
/ Standardized patients
/ Students
/ Teaching
/ Teaching methods
/ Volunteers
2019
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Clinical Virtual Simulation in Nursing Education: Randomized Controlled Trial
by
Padilha, José Miguel
, Machado, Paulo Puga
, Ramos, José
, Costa, Patrício
, Ribeiro, Ana
in
Attrition
/ Clinical assessment
/ Clinical Competence - standards
/ Clinical decision making
/ Clinical medicine
/ Clinical nursing
/ Clinical trials
/ Cognitive style
/ Communication skills
/ Decision making
/ Education
/ Education, Nursing - methods
/ Equipment and supplies
/ Female
/ Fidelity
/ Groups
/ Health care
/ Health care reform
/ Health education
/ Health services
/ Humans
/ Innovations
/ Interactive computer systems
/ Internet
/ Intervention
/ Knowledge
/ Laboratories
/ Learning
/ Likert scale
/ Male
/ Medical care
/ Medical decision making
/ Medical education
/ Multiple choice
/ Nurses
/ Nursing
/ Nursing education
/ Nursing schools
/ Objectives
/ Original Paper
/ Patients
/ Pedagogy
/ Performance evaluation
/ Physiology
/ Quality management
/ Reasoning
/ Recreation
/ Satisfaction
/ Self image
/ Self-efficacy
/ Simulated clients
/ Simulation
/ Skills
/ Standardized patients
/ Students
/ Teaching
/ Teaching methods
/ Volunteers
2019
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Do you wish to request the book?
Clinical Virtual Simulation in Nursing Education: Randomized Controlled Trial
by
Padilha, José Miguel
, Machado, Paulo Puga
, Ramos, José
, Costa, Patrício
, Ribeiro, Ana
in
Attrition
/ Clinical assessment
/ Clinical Competence - standards
/ Clinical decision making
/ Clinical medicine
/ Clinical nursing
/ Clinical trials
/ Cognitive style
/ Communication skills
/ Decision making
/ Education
/ Education, Nursing - methods
/ Equipment and supplies
/ Female
/ Fidelity
/ Groups
/ Health care
/ Health care reform
/ Health education
/ Health services
/ Humans
/ Innovations
/ Interactive computer systems
/ Internet
/ Intervention
/ Knowledge
/ Laboratories
/ Learning
/ Likert scale
/ Male
/ Medical care
/ Medical decision making
/ Medical education
/ Multiple choice
/ Nurses
/ Nursing
/ Nursing education
/ Nursing schools
/ Objectives
/ Original Paper
/ Patients
/ Pedagogy
/ Performance evaluation
/ Physiology
/ Quality management
/ Reasoning
/ Recreation
/ Satisfaction
/ Self image
/ Self-efficacy
/ Simulated clients
/ Simulation
/ Skills
/ Standardized patients
/ Students
/ Teaching
/ Teaching methods
/ Volunteers
2019
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Clinical Virtual Simulation in Nursing Education: Randomized Controlled Trial
Journal Article
Clinical Virtual Simulation in Nursing Education: Randomized Controlled Trial
2019
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Overview
In the field of health care, knowledge and clinical reasoning are key with regard to quality and confidence in decision making. The development of knowledge and clinical reasoning is influenced not only by students' intrinsic factors but also by extrinsic factors such as satisfaction with taught content, pedagogic resources and pedagogic methods, and the nature of the objectives and challenges proposed. Nowadays, professors play the role of learning facilitators rather than simple \"lecturers\" and face students as active learners who are capable of attributing individual meanings to their personal goals, challenges, and experiences to build their own knowledge over time. Innovations in health simulation technologies have led to clinical virtual simulation. Clinical virtual simulation is the recreation of reality depicted on a computer screen and involves real people operating simulated systems. It is a type of simulation that places people in a central role through their exercising of motor control skills, decision skills, and communication skills using virtual patients in a variety of clinical settings. Clinical virtual simulation can provide a pedagogical strategy and can act as a facilitator of knowledge retention, clinical reasoning, improved satisfaction with learning, and finally, improved self-efficacy. However, little is known about its effectiveness with regard to satisfaction, self-efficacy, knowledge retention, and clinical reasoning.
This study aimed to evaluate the effect of clinical virtual simulation with regard to knowledge retention, clinical reasoning, self-efficacy, and satisfaction with the learning experience among nursing students.
A randomized controlled trial with a pretest and 2 posttests was carried out with Portuguese nursing students (N=42). The participants, split into 2 groups, had a lesson with the same objectives and timing. The experimental group (n=21) used a case-based learning approach, with clinical virtual simulator as a resource, whereas the control group (n=21) used the same case-based learning approach, with recourse to a low-fidelity simulator and a realistic environment. The classes were conducted by the usual course lecturers. We assessed knowledge and clinical reasoning before the intervention, after the intervention, and 2 months later, with a true or false and multiple-choice knowledge test. The students' levels of learning satisfaction and self-efficacy were assessed with a Likert scale after the intervention.
The experimental group made more significant improvements in knowledge after the intervention (P=.001; d=1.13) and 2 months later (P=.02; d=0.75), and it also showed higher levels of learning satisfaction (P<.001; d=1.33). We did not find statistical differences in self-efficacy perceptions (P=.9; d=0.054).
The introduction of clinical virtual simulation in nursing education has the potential to improve knowledge retention and clinical reasoning in an initial stage and over time, and it increases the satisfaction with the learning experience among nursing students.
Publisher
Journal of Medical Internet Research,Gunther Eysenbach MD MPH, Associate Professor,JMIR Publications
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