1. Undergraduate nursing students' perceptions about disaster preparedness and response in Istanbul, Turkey, and Miyazaki, Japan: A cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Öztekin, Seher Deniz, Larson, Eric Edwin, Yüksel, Serpil, and Altun Uğraş, Gülay
- Subjects
CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DISASTERS ,EMERGENCY management ,FISHER exact test ,HEALTH occupations students ,NATURAL disasters ,NURSING students ,SENSORY perception ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SOCIAL role ,STUDENTS ,STUDENT attitudes ,SURVEYS ,UNDERGRADUATES ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Aim Although the awareness of disasters has increased among nurses, the concept of disaster preparedness and response has not been sufficiently explored with undergraduate nursing students. The aim of this study was to assess and compare the perceptions of students regarding disaster preparedness and response that live in different earthquake-prone cities; Istanbul, Turkey and Miyazaki, Japan. Methods A cross-sectional study employing seven questions was conducted in a final group of 1053 nursing students from Istanbul, Turkey, and Miyazaki, Japan. Results Most study respondents were female, aged 18-22 years, with a high proportion of second year students in both cities. Istanbul's students had more knowledge about disaster preparedness and response in relation to age and year of university, showing statistically significant differences. Istanbul's highest rated responses to disaster characteristics were on structural elements and injuries/deaths, while Miyazaki's was 'unpredictable/sudden/disorganized'. Respondents in Istanbul identified earthquakes as the disaster most likely to occur, while respondents in Miyazaki identified typhoon/hurricane. Study participants responded that they could provide caregiver roles during a disaster event rather than triage or managerial roles as disaster responders. Conclusion Disaster characteristics were not described by one third of the students. Of the two-thirds that were described, most were of events that were highly predictable because of their frequencies in the given areas. Universities need to target and then focus on high-risk factors in their areas and have disaster plans for students who can provide triage and managerial nursing roles as disaster responders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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