R. O'Keefe is a nurse practitioner, Inpatient Urology, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
K. Auffermann is a nurse practitioner, New England Conservatory, Boston, Massachusetts, and a clinical nurse, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Acad Med. 2022 Mar 1;97(3S):S61-S65. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000004537.
Graduate nursing students are both nurses and adult learners. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many found themselves working on the frontlines while maintaining their studies and confronting challenges in their professional, educational, and personal lives. Changes in work environments, including redeployments, increased hours, and furloughs, challenged their work-study balance. The rapid pivot to virtual instruction allowed graduate nursing students to continue their coursework, but asynchronous delivery of course content increased their isolation and stress. Academic institutions supported graduate nursing students through innovations such as regular town hall meetings and flexible attendance policies, while the widespread closure of clinical learning sites became one of their biggest challenges. A minimum of 500 hours of supervised direct patient care is required to prepare a student to practice as a nurse practitioner, but there is no formal, financed clinical placement system for nurse practitioner students-leaving this clinical learning requirement particularly vulnerable to disruption during the pandemic. Some of the clinical learning alternatives employed included occupational health work, tele-precepting, and simulation. Since telehealth will be a part of the future of health care delivery, tele-precepting practices should be further developed, but simulation was underused and not an acceptable replacement for supervised direct patient care. A postpandemic future needs to limit gaps in the development of safe, competent health care providers by viewing graduate nursing students as essential workers and ensuring their access to the robust didactic and clinical learning opportunities that will best position them as leaders in health care.
研究生护理学生既是护士又是成年学习者。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,许多人发现自己在前线工作,同时还要兼顾学业,并应对职业、教育和个人生活中的挑战。工作环境的变化,包括重新部署、工作时间增加和休假,挑战了他们的工作学习平衡。向虚拟教学的快速转变使研究生护理学生能够继续他们的课程,但课程内容的异步交付增加了他们的孤立感和压力。学术机构通过定期召开市政厅会议和灵活的出勤政策等创新举措为研究生护理学生提供支持,而广泛关闭临床学习场所成为他们面临的最大挑战之一。要使学生为担任执业护士而做好准备,需要至少 500 小时的监督直接患者护理,但没有为执业护士学生提供正式的、有资金支持的临床安置系统,这使得他们的临床学习要求在大流行期间特别容易受到干扰。所采用的一些临床学习替代方案包括职业健康工作、远程预实践和模拟。由于远程医疗将成为医疗保健未来的一部分,因此应该进一步发展远程预实践实践,但模拟的使用不足,不能替代监督直接患者护理。在后疫情时代,需要将研究生护理学生视为重要的工作人员,并确保他们能够获得强大的理论和临床学习机会,从而最大限度地发挥他们在医疗保健领域的领导作用,以缩小安全、有能力的医疗保健提供者的发展差距。