1. A qualitative descriptive enquiry of nursing students' perceptions of international clinical placement experiences.
- Author
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Bagnasco, Annamaria, Rossi, Silvia, Dasso, Nicoletta, Cananzi, Letizia, Timmins, Fiona, Aleo, Giuseppe, Catania, Gianluca, Zanini, Milko, and Sasso, Loredana
- Subjects
EXCHANGE of persons programs ,EXPERIENCE ,INTERNSHIP programs ,INTERVIEWING ,LEARNING ,RESEARCH methodology ,NURSING ,NURSING students ,STUDENTS ,STUDENT attitudes ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis ,EDUCATIONAL mobility ,CULTURAL competence ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,UNDERGRADUATES ,CLINICAL supervision - Abstract
International mobility for nursing students is still a relatively new phenomenon. While educators and students are both excited by the opportunity that mobility presents, there are often many challenges inherent within third level organisations and practice organisations. These obstacles not only serve to make international mobility arrangements complex to manage but also mean that these opportunities are only available to very small numbers of students. Furthermore the benefits of undergraduate international exchanges remain largely anecdotal and the elements that facilitate success are not entirely clear. To address these issues, a qualitative study was conducted to identify the elements that characterize a nursing student's successful learning during international clinical placement. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with six students who had completed their international clinical placements experiences in Portugal, Spain, and Italy. Three common themes emerged from the data analysis: relationship with institutions and countries, student's thoughts and feelings and learning outcomes and the role of the nursing student's clinical supervisor. These themes contain seven sub-categories, representing the characterizing elements of the student's experience of mobility in the foreign country. These results are useful to nurse educators internationally to inform clinical learning experiences within exchange programmes. • International clinical placement enables the development of transcultural skills. • Nurses' transcultural skills have an impact on patient safety. • Undergraduate clinical supervisor's crucial role favours learning outcomes. • Our results are important for nursing educators to improve clinical environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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