MacKinnon Karen, Marcellus Lenora, Rivers Julie, Gordon Carol, Ryan Maureen, Butcher Diane
1 School of Nursing, University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada2 Brock Loyalist Collaborative Nursing Program, Loyalist College, Ontario, Canada3 McPherson Library, University of Victoria, British Columbia, CanadaCenter conducting the reviewUniversity of Victoria and the Queens Joanna Briggs Collaboration.
JBI Database System Rev Implement Rep. 2015 Jan;13(1):14-26. doi: 10.11124/jbisrir-2015-1694.
REVIEW QUESTION/OBJECTIVE: The overall aim of this systematic review is to identify the appropriateness and meaningfulness of maternal-child simulation-based learning for undergraduate or pre-registration nursing students in educational settings to inform curriculum decision-making.1. What are the experiences of nursing or health professional students participating in undergraduate or pre-licensure maternal-child simulation-based learning in educational settings?2. What are the experiences of educators participating in undergraduate or pre-licensure maternal-child simulation-based learning in educational settings?3. What teaching and learning practices in maternal-child simulation-based learning are considered appropriate and meaningful by students and educators?
Maternal-child care is one of the pillars of primary health care. Health promotion and illness/ injury prevention begin in the preconception period and continue through pregnancy, birth, the postpartum period and the childrearing years. Thus, lifelong wellness is promoted across the continuum of perinatal and pediatric care which influences family health and early child development. Registered nurses (RNs) are expected to have the knowledge and skills needed to provide evidence-based nursing with childbearing and child-rearing families to promote health and address health inequities in many settings, including inner city, rural, northern, indigenous and global communities. The Canadian Maternity Experiences survey and the Report by the Advisor on Healthy Children and Youth provide information on current shortages of perinatal and child health care providers and stress the importance of the role of nurses as providers of rural and remote care. From a global health perspective, continued concern with both perinatal and child health morbidities and mortalities highlight the importance of maintaining and strengthening the presence of maternal and child health learning opportunities within undergraduate nursing curriculum.Despite this importance, educators in many countries have acknowledged difficulties providing nursing students with maternal-child hospital learning experiencesdue to declining birth rates, women's changing expectations about childbirth (i.e. birth as an intimate experience), increased outpatient and community management of early childhood health conditions, and increased competition for clinical placements. Canadian nurse educators and practice leaders have also identified gaps in recent RN graduates' readiness to provide safe, competent and evidence-based care for childbearing and child-rearing families. Newly graduated RNs working in acute care hospitals and in rural/remote community practice settings report feeling unprepared for providing maternity, neonatal and early childhood care.Recent concerns about the clinical reasoning skills of new graduates and the link to poor patient outcomes (e.g. not recognizing deteriorating patients) have led to calls to reform nursing education. In the Carnegie report, Benner, Sutphen, Leonard and Day identified four essential themes needed in the thinking and approach to nursing education, including: (1) a shift in focus from covering decontextualized knowledge to "teaching for a sense of salience, situated cognition, and identifying action in particular clinical situations"; (2) better integration of classroom and clinical teaching; (3) more emphasis on clinical reasoning; and, (4) an emphasis on identity formation rather than socialization. Brown and Hartrick Doane propose that nurses need to draw on a range of knowledge that enhances the nurse's "sensitivity and ability to be responsive in particular moments of practice". Theoretical or decontextualized knowledge becomes a "pragmatic tool" used to improve nursing practice. Simulation has been identified as a promising pragmatic educational tool for practice learning that can be integrated with theoretical knowledge from nursing and other disciplines.Bland, Topping and Wood conducted a concept analysis and defined simulation in nursing education as:They also proposed that "simulated learning is a dynamic concept that deserves empirical evaluation not merely to determine its effects but to uncover its full potential as a learning strategy".Simulation usually involves student(s) providing nursing care to a simulated patient who might be a manikin or actor based on a standardized scenario. Following the experiential learning opportunity the scenario is debriefed and the clinical situation analyzed with opportunities for reflection on performance. In nursing education, simulation is usually used in a way that complements learning in practice settings. However simulation has also been used: to make up some clinical practice hours, to provide opportunities to practice and assess particular clinical skills, and for remedial learning when students encounter difficulties in practice settings. In addition simulation provides the opportunity to focus on quality and safety competencies (QSEN) that have been identified for nurses. New forms of simulation are being developed with multiple patients so that nursing students can learn to prioritize care needs and delegate care to other team members.Nurse educators have identified several advantages for learners using simulation, including: providing a safe environment to improve nursing competence, allowing learners to become more comfortable with receiving feedback about their clinical performance, providing consistent and comparable experiences for all students, and learning a mix of technical and non-technical skills including communication, teamwork and delegation. Within the Canadian context, students and instructors have reported positive learning experiences with simulation, particularly in understanding complex patient care scenarios, multidisciplinary team scenarios, team-based learning, and reflective debriefing. Furthermore, simulation technology has been proposed as a strategy for developing clinical reasoning skills, enhancing nurses' abilities to build upon previous knowledge and past experiences, and manage new or unfamiliar situations.Simulation has previously been integrated into nursing curricula in a "piecemeal" fashion that lacks an integrative pedagogy or theoretical approach. More recently a number of theoretical and pedagogical frameworks and best practice standards have been published. In April 2014 a preliminary search of literature (in CINAHL, Medline, Academic Search Complete and Web of Science) was conducted with guidance from our library specialist to test the search strategy and ensure that there would be enough qualitative findings to include in the systematic review. A preliminary scan of the abstracts from these searches demonstrated that many experiential case reports with qualitative findings were missed with the use of research limiters (including our search strategy specifically constructed to retrieve qualitative research) so the decision was made to err on the side of caution by searching more broadly and review a larger number of abstracts for inclusion in the study. However, a number of reports with qualitative findings were identified. For example, from a review of the abstracts from a CINAHL search dated April 17, qualitative research papers (including two dissertations), 12 evaluation study reports, six mixed methods studies and nine case reports with qualitative findings were identified. It is timely then to review qualitative studies to better understand the meaningfulness and appropriateness of integrating maternal-child simulation-based learning activities in undergraduate nursing education programs.A search of both the Cochrane Library of Systematic Reviews and the Joanna Briggs Institute Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports has been conducted. No systematic reviews of qualitative studies of maternal-child simulation-based learning for undergraduate or pre-registration nursing students in educational settings are evident in the literature. Although a systematic review of the meaningfulness and appropriateness of using human patient simulation manikins as a teaching and learning strategy in undergraduate nursing education had been planned and a protocol registered in October 2009, we learned from contacting the lead author that this systematic review was not completed. Currently little is known about how nursing students and/or educators have experienced maternal-child simulation or their understandings of the appropriateness and meaningfulness of particular simulation-based learning practices. Our proposed systematic review therefore fulfills all requirements for the PROSPERO database.
For this review we will use the definition of "simulation-based learning experience" adopted by the International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation and Learning (INACSL):We will include any use of simulation in an educational setting (with pre-registration or pre-licensure or undergraduate nursing or health professional students) with a focus relevant for maternal-child nursing.Maternal-child nursing has been variously defined in literature to include maternity care and pediatric nursing. For the purposes of this review, we will include perinatal, neonatal and pediatric contexts of care that focus on families with children under the age of five. We will exclude studies that focus on school age children, adolescents and/or youth.We have adapted an earlier definition of "appropriateness" as the "best conditions under which simulation can be integrated into undergraduate nursing education". In this review "meaningfulness" refers to the experiences and reflections of undergraduate nursing or health professional students and educators as presented in the studies reviewed.
综述问题/目标:本系统评价的总体目标是确定在教育环境中,面向本科或注册前护理专业学生开展的母婴模拟学习的适宜性和意义,以为课程决策提供参考。1. 护理或卫生专业学生在教育环境中参与本科或执照前母婴模拟学习的体验如何?2. 教育工作者在教育环境中参与本科或执照前母婴模拟学习的体验如何?3. 学生和教育工作者认为母婴模拟学习中的哪些教学实践是适宜且有意义的?
母婴护理是初级卫生保健的支柱之一。健康促进和疾病/伤害预防始于孕前阶段,并贯穿孕期、分娩期、产后阶段及育儿期。因此,在围产期和儿科护理的连续过程中促进终身健康,这会影响家庭健康和儿童早期发育。注册护士(RN)应具备所需的知识和技能,以便为生育和育儿家庭提供循证护理,从而在包括市中心、农村、北部、原住民和全球社区在内的许多环境中促进健康并解决健康不平等问题。加拿大产妇经历调查以及健康儿童和青年顾问报告提供了有关围产期和儿童保健提供者当前短缺的信息,并强调了护士作为农村和偏远地区护理提供者的角色的重要性。从全球健康的角度来看,对围产期和儿童健康发病率和死亡率的持续关注凸显了在本科护理课程中维持和加强母婴健康学习机会的重要性。
尽管母婴护理很重要,但许多国家的教育工作者都承认,由于出生率下降、女性对分娩的期望不断变化(即将分娩视为一种私密体验)、幼儿健康状况的门诊和社区管理增加以及临床实习竞争加剧,难以让护理专业学生获得母婴医院学习体验。加拿大的护士教育工作者和实践领导者也指出,最近毕业的注册护士在为生育和育儿家庭提供安全、胜任和循证护理方面准备不足。在急症护理医院以及农村/偏远社区实践环境中工作的新毕业注册护士报告称,他们在提供产妇、新生儿和幼儿护理方面感到准备不足。
最近对新毕业生临床推理技能的担忧以及与不良患者结局的关联(例如未识别出病情恶化的患者)导致了对护理教育改革的呼吁。在卡内基报告中,本纳、萨特芬、伦纳德和戴确定了护理教育的思维和方法中需要的四个基本主题,包括:(1)重点从涵盖脱离情境的知识转向“为突出感、情境认知以及在特定临床情况中识别行动而教学”;(2)更好地整合课堂教学和临床教学;(3)更加强调临床推理;以及(4)强调身份形成而非社会化。布朗和哈特里克·多恩提议,护士需要借鉴一系列知识,以增强护士“在特定实践时刻的敏感性和反应能力”。理论或脱离情境的知识成为用于改善护理实践的“实用工具”。模拟已被确定为一种有前景的实用教育工具,可用于实践学习,并可与护理及其他学科的理论知识相结合。
布兰德、托普金和伍德进行了一项概念分析,并将护理教育中的模拟定义为:
他们还提议,“模拟学习是一个动态概念,值得进行实证评估,不仅要确定其效果,还要挖掘其作为一种学习策略的全部潜力”。
模拟通常涉及学生根据标准化场景为模拟患者(可能是人体模型或演员)提供护理。在体验式学习机会之后,会对场景进行总结,并分析临床情况,同时提供反思表现的机会。在护理教育中,模拟通常以补充实践环境中学习的方式使用。然而,模拟也被用于:弥补一些临床实践时间、提供练习和评估特定临床技能的机会,以及在学生在实践环境中遇到困难时进行补救学习。此外,模拟提供了专注于为护士确定的质量和安全能力(QSEN)的机会。正在开发新的模拟形式,涉及多个患者,以便护理专业学生能够学习如何优先处理护理需求并将护理工作委托给其他团队成员。
护士教育工作者已经确定了学习者使用模拟的几个优点,包括:提供一个安全的环境来提高护理能力、让学习者更愿意接受关于其临床表现的反馈、为所有学生提供一致且可比的体验,以及学习包括沟通、团队合作和任务分配在内的一系列技术和非技术技能。在加拿大的背景下,学生和教师报告了模拟学习的积极体验,特别是在理解复杂的患者护理场景、多学科团队场景、基于团队的学习以及反思总结方面。此外,模拟技术已被提议作为培养临床推理技能、增强护士基于先前知识和过去经验进行学习以及应对新的或不熟悉情况的能力的一种策略。
模拟以前是以“零碎”的方式整合到护理课程中的,缺乏综合的教学法或理论方法。最近已经发表了一些理论和教学框架以及最佳实践标准。2014年4月,在我们图书馆专家的指导下,对文献(在CINAHL、Medline、学术搜索完整版和科学网中)进行了初步检索,以测试搜索策略,并确保有足够的定性研究结果纳入系统评价。对这些检索结果的摘要进行的初步浏览表明,使用研究限制词(包括我们专门构建的用于检索定性研究的搜索策略)遗漏了许多带有定性研究结果的经验性案例报告,因此决定谨慎行事,进行更广泛的搜索,并审查更多的摘要以纳入研究。然而,确定了一些带有定性研究结果的报告。例如,从对4月17日CINAHL检索的摘要的审查中,可以确定定性研究论文(包括两篇论文)、12份评估研究报告、6份混合方法研究以及9份带有定性研究结果的案例报告。因此,及时审查定性研究以更好地理解将母婴模拟学习活动整合到本科护理教育计划中的意义和适宜性是很有必要的。
我们已经对Cochrane系统评价图书馆以及乔安娜·布里格斯循证卫生保健中心系统评价与实施报告数据库进行了检索。文献中没有关于在教育环境中面向本科或注册前护理专业学生开展的母婴模拟学习的定性研究的系统评价。尽管曾计划对在本科护理教育中使用人体患者模拟模型作为教学策略的意义和适宜性进行系统评价,并于2009年10月注册了方案,但我们通过联系主要作者了解到该系统评价尚未完成。目前,对于护理专业学生和/或教育工作者如何体验母婴模拟,或者他们对特定模拟学习实践的适宜性和意义的理解知之甚少。因此,我们提议的系统评价满足了PROSPERO数据库的所有要求。
对于本综述,我们将使用国际临床模拟与学习护理协会(INACSL)采用的“基于模拟的学习体验”的定义:
我们将包括在教育环境中(针对注册前或执照前或本科护理或卫生专业学生)对模拟的任何使用,其重点与母婴护理相关。
母婴护理在文献中有多种定义,包括产妇护理和儿科护理。为了本综述的目的,我们将包括关注五岁以下儿童家庭的围产期、新生儿期和儿科护理背景。我们将排除关注学龄儿童、青少年和/或青年的研究。
我们采用了早期对“适宜性”的定义,即“模拟可融入本科护理教育的最佳条件”。在本综述中,“意义”指的是本科护理或卫生专业学生及教育工作者在被审查研究中呈现的体验和反思。