1. Testing a diabetes keotacidosis simulation in critical care nursing: A randomized control trial
- Author
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Leodoro J. Labrague, Melba Sheila D'Souza, Kader Parahoo, Subrahmanya Nairy Karkada, and Ramesh Venkatesaperumal
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Medical education ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Epidemiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Test (assessment) ,Ketoacidosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Infectious Diseases ,Self-confidence ,Randomized controlled trial ,Critical thinking ,law ,Scale (social sciences) ,Intervention (counseling) ,Critical care nursing ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Background Integrating high fidelity simulation while teaching diabetes ketoacidosis would ensure a controlled therapeutic milieu for nursing students to practice. Purpose To evaluate the effectiveness of simulation teaching intervention for diabetes ketoacidosis in critical care nursing for undergraduate students' in a public university. Methods A simple, two-arm (parallel) randomized controlled trial was conducted in a national public university. A total of 164 nursing students were recruited and randomly assigned to two groups. The simulation group (N = 82) participated in the diabetes ketoacidosis high-fidelity simulation teaching intervention compared to the control group (N = 82) who were exposed to patient assignments on a clinical day on an acute medical unit. The primary outcomes were assessed using the Student Satisfaction and Self Confidence in Learning, Simulation Design Scale, Educational Practice Questionnaire, Critical Thinking Skills Tool and California Critical Thinking Skill Test from 2015 to 2016. Results The students in the randomized control trial have had significantly higher scores on Student Satisfaction, and Self Confidence in Learning, Simulation Design, Educational Practice, Critical thinking skills and Critical Thinking Skill post-test mean scores. Younger age groups who had higher satisfaction had better self-confidence and a positive perception of the simulation design and education practice, which reflected better learning outcomes in the simulation group compared to the control group. Conclusions This study supports the use of high-fidelity simulation scenarios as a teaching-learning strategy that is useful for students to assess, plan, intervene and evaluate in emergencies like diabetes ketoacidosis.
- Published
- 2020