Bouchaud Mary T, Swan Beth Ann
Assistant Professor and Community Clinical Coordinator, Thomas Jefferson College of Nursing, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA; and.
Dean and Professor, Thomas Jefferson College of Nursing, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA.
Nurs Forum. 2017 Jan;52(1):38-49. doi: 10.1111/nuf.12164. Epub 2016 Apr 22.
With an evolving focus on primary, community-based, and patient-centered care rather than acute, hospital-centric, disease-focused care, and recognition of the importance of coordinating care and managing transitions across providers and settings of care, registered nurses need to be prepared from a different and broader knowledge base and skills set. A culture change among nurse educators and administrators and in nursing education is needed to prepare competent registered nurses capable of practicing from a health promotion, disease prevention, community- and population-focused construct in caring for a population of patients who are presenting health problems and conditions that persist across decades and/or lifetimes. While healthcare delivery is moving from the hospital to ambulatory and community settings, community-based educational opportunities for nursing students are shrinking due to a variety of reasons, including but not limited to increased regulatory requirements, the presence of competing numbers of nursing schools and their increased enrollment of students, and decreasing availability of community resources capable and willing to precept students in an all-day interactive learning environment.
A detailed discussion of one college of nursings' journey to find an innovative solution and approach to the dilemma of limited and decreasing available community clinical sites to prepare senior level prelicensure baccalaureate nursing students for healthcare practice in the twenty-first century.
This article demonstrated how medium/maximum prisons can provide an ideal learning experience for not only technical nursing skills but more importantly for reinforcing key learning goals for community-based care, raising population-based awareness, and promoting cultural awareness and sensitivity. In addition, this college of nursing overcame the challenges of initiating and maintaining clinical placement in a prison facility, collaboratively developed strategies to insure student and faculty safety satisfying legal and administrative concerns for both the college of nursing and the prison, and developed educational postclinical assignments that solidified clinical course and nursing program objectives. Lastly, this college of nursing quickly learned that not only did nursing students agree to clinical placement in an all-male medium- to maximum-security prison despite its accompanying restrictive regulations especially as it relates to their access to personal technology devices, but there was an unknown desire for a unique clinical experience.
The initial pilot program of placing eight senior level prelicensure baccalaureate nursing students in a 4,000-person all male medium- to maximum-security prison for their community clinical rotation has expanded to include three state-run maximum all male prisons in two states, a 3,000-person male/female federal prison, and several juvenile detention centers. Clinical placement of students in these sites is by request only, resulting in lengthy student waiting lists. This innovative approach to clinical learning has piqued the interest of graduate nurse practitioner (NP) students as well. One MSN, NP student has been placed in the federal prison every semester for over a year. Due to increasing interest from graduate students to learn correctional health nursing, the college of nursing is now expanding NP placement to the other contracted maximum-security prisons. This entire experience has changed clinical policies within a well-established academic culture and promoted creative thinking regarding how and where to clinically educate and prepare registered baccalaureate nurses for the new culture of health and wellness.
随着医疗重点逐渐从以医院为中心的急性病治疗和疾病导向型护理,转向以初级医疗、社区医疗和患者为中心的护理,并且认识到协调护理以及管理不同医疗服务提供者和护理环境之间过渡的重要性,注册护士需要具备不同且更广泛的知识基础和技能组合。护士教育工作者、管理人员以及护理教育领域需要进行文化变革,以培养有能力的注册护士,使其能够基于健康促进、疾病预防、社区及人群导向的理念,为患有持续数十年和/或一生的健康问题及状况的患者群体提供护理。虽然医疗服务正从医院转向门诊和社区环境,但由于多种原因,护理专业学生的社区教育机会正在减少,这些原因包括但不限于监管要求增加、护理学校数量竞争加剧及其学生招生人数增加,以及能够且愿意在全天互动学习环境中指导学生的社区资源减少。
详细讨论一所护理学院为解决社区临床实习点数量有限且不断减少这一困境,从而为二十一世纪的医疗实践培养高级别预执业本科护理学生所采取的创新解决方案和方法。
本文展示了中等/最高安全级别的监狱如何不仅能为护理技术技能提供理想的学习体验,更重要的是,能强化基于社区护理的关键学习目标、提高人群意识,并促进文化意识和敏感性。此外,这所护理学院克服了在监狱设施中启动和维持临床实习的挑战,共同制定策略以确保学生和教师的安全,满足护理学院和监狱的法律及管理要求,并开发了巩固临床课程和护理项目目标的临床后教育作业。最后,这所护理学院很快了解到,尽管有相关限制规定,尤其是涉及个人技术设备的使用,但护理专业学生不仅同意在全男性中等至高安全级别的监狱进行临床实习,而且对独特临床体验有着未知的渴望。
最初将八名高级别预执业本科护理学生安排在一所容纳4000人的全男性中等至高安全级别的监狱进行社区临床轮转的试点项目,现已扩展到包括两个州的三所州立最高安全级别的全男性监狱、一所容纳3000人的男女混合联邦监狱以及几个青少年拘留中心。学生在这些地点的临床实习仅接受申请,导致学生等待名单很长。这种创新的临床学习方法也引起了研究生护士从业者(NP)学生的兴趣。在过去一年多的时间里,每学期都有一名MSN、NP学生被安排到联邦监狱。由于研究生对学习惩教健康护理的兴趣不断增加,护理学院现在正将NP实习扩展到其他签约的最高安全级别的监狱。这一整体经历改变了既定学术文化中的临床政策,并促进了关于如何以及在何处为注册本科护士进行临床教育和培养,以适应新的健康与保健文化的创造性思维。