Institutional Equity, Effectiveness and Success, Virginia Commonwealth University, Box 843022, Richmond, VA, USA.
INOVA Fairfax Medical Campus or INOVA Health System, Fairfax, VA, USA.
Nurse Educ Today. 2022 Aug;115:105407. doi: 10.1016/j.nedt.2022.105407. Epub 2022 May 14.
Introducing best practice approaches to help nursing students identify and respond to patients who are/have been exposed to intimate partner violence (IPV) is instrumental to their professional development. The objectives of this study are to gather preliminary data from the American Association for the Colleges of Nursing (AACN) affiliated schools of nursing to determine 1) if they offer any training of students at the undergraduate or graduate level in identifying and responding to IPV; 2) if so, what are the components of that training, outcomes, and satisfaction with the existing approach; 3) if not, what are the individual and institutional level barriers to offering this training; and 4) if schools are interested in incorporating best practice, IPV training content into their curriculum.
A total of 836 AACN affiliated nursing schools across the US were surveyed using a 64-item electronic survey.
Of the 95 (11%) schools that completed at least 40% of the survey, approximately 60% offer IPV training once at the undergraduate level and only 30% offered such preparation at the graduate level. We found that most IPV education took place as embedded material within an existing course. Those nursing schools not providing any IPV education identified that they would like to at both levels and the 50% of nursing schools already providing this education said they wanted to provide more. The greatest barriers to offering IPV education were lack of faculty expertise and time constraints, yet about 70% of the participants stated that IPV education should be an essential part of undergraduate and graduate nursing school.
This study provides useful insights to inform IPV curriculum development by identifying common gaps in IPV education experienced by participating schools and strategies for addressing them.
本研究旨在从美国护理学院协会(AACN)附属护理学校收集初步数据,以确定:1)是否在本科或研究生水平上为学生提供任何有关识别和应对亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)的培训;2)如果有,培训的内容、结果和对现有方法的满意度是什么;3)如果没有,提供这种培训的个人和机构层面的障碍是什么;以及 4)学校是否有兴趣将最佳实践、IPV 培训内容纳入其课程。
对美国各地的 836 所 AACN 附属护理学校进行了一项 64 项电子调查。
在完成至少 40%调查的 95 所(11%)学校中,约 60%的学校在本科阶段提供一次 IPV 培训,只有 30%的学校在研究生阶段提供这种准备。我们发现,大多数 IPV 教育是作为现有课程的嵌入式内容进行的。那些没有提供任何 IPV 教育的护理学校表示,他们希望在本科和研究生两个层次上都提供这种教育,而已经提供这种教育的 50%的护理学校表示他们希望提供更多。提供 IPV 教育的最大障碍是缺乏教师专业知识和时间限制,但约 70%的参与者表示,IPV 教育应该成为本科和研究生护理学校的重要组成部分。
本研究通过确定参与学校在 IPV 教育方面的常见差距以及解决这些差距的策略,为 IPV 课程开发提供了有用的见解。