LaRosa Jessica M, Lenker Hallie, Azamfirei Razvan, Morgenstern Stephanie, Hajnik Krista, Mennie Colleen, Wieczorek Beth, Brown Kristen M, Shilkofski Nicole, Kudchadkar Sapna R
Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Nurs Crit Care. 2025 Jul;30(4):e13215. doi: 10.1111/nicc.13215. Epub 2025 Jan 6.
Early mobility is one strategy to reduce the harm from immobility that children experience in the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Early-mobility programmes rely on nurses, who currently perceive insufficient training as a barrier to mobilizing critically ill children. Nurses have identified simulation as a strategy to improve implementation of early-mobility protocols.
To use adult learning theory to develop an early-mobility simulation curriculum for nurses and to evaluate if the curriculum improves nursing self-efficacy, knowledge and skills in mobilizing critically ill children.
Using a curriculum development framework, an interprofessional team created a simulation curriculum. The educational strategies included group simulations, debriefing sessions and didactic sessions. The curriculum evaluation was conducted as quality improvement initiative using a pre-post quasi-experimental design to evaluate nurses' mobility self-efficacy, knowledge and clinical skills.
Eleven PICU nurses participated in the simulation-based early mobility curriculum. Before participation in the curriculum, 73% of nurses felt fairly confident and no nurses felt confident mobilizing a PICU patient. After participation, 100% of nurses felt at least fairly confident mobilizing a PICU patient (p = .031). Knowledge scores improved from a median of 14 (IQR, 12-16) questions correct to 17 (IQR, 16-18) questions correct (p = .001). Nurses completed more required clinical tasks during the Observed Structured Clinical Examination, with improvement from a median of 15 items correct (IQR, 14-16) to 19 items correct (IQR, 15-20; p = .0037).
Developing a simulation-based early-mobility curriculum for PICU nurses is feasible. Nurses who completed the curriculum had improved self-efficacy, knowledge and clinical skills in mobilizing critically ill children.
The findings of this study demonstrate that simulation is a potentially useful educational tool to teach nurses to safely and effectively mobilize critically ill children. The strategy should be evaluated further to determine if it impacts physical rehabilitation at the bedside.
早期活动是减少儿童在儿科重症监护病房(PICU)因活动受限而受到伤害的一种策略。早期活动计划依赖于护士,而目前护士认为培训不足是为重症患儿进行活动的障碍。护士们已将模拟作为一种改进早期活动方案实施的策略。
运用成人学习理论为护士开发早期活动模拟课程,并评估该课程是否能提高护士在为重症患儿进行活动方面的自我效能感、知识和技能。
一个跨专业团队运用课程开发框架创建了一个模拟课程。教育策略包括小组模拟、汇报会和讲授课程。课程评估作为一项质量改进举措,采用前后对照的准实验设计,以评估护士的活动自我效能感、知识和临床技能。
11名PICU护士参与了基于模拟的早期活动课程。在参与课程之前,73%的护士感觉相当自信,没有护士对为PICU患者进行活动感到自信。参与课程之后,100%的护士对为PICU患者进行活动至少感觉相当自信(p = 0.031)。知识得分从中位数答对14道题(四分位间距,12 - 16)提高到答对17道题(四分位间距,16 - 18)(p = 0.001)。在观察性结构化临床考试中,护士完成的必需临床任务更多,从中位数答对15项(四分位间距,14 - 16)提高到答对19项(四分位间距,15 - 20;p = 0.0037)。
为PICU护士开发基于模拟的早期活动课程是可行的。完成该课程的护士在为重症患儿进行活动方面自我效能感、知识和临床技能均有所提高。
本研究结果表明,模拟是一种潜在有用的教育工具,可教会护士安全有效地为重症患儿进行活动。该策略应进一步评估,以确定其是否会影响床边的身体康复。