Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10316110 Nurse Education in Practice 2005 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper focuses upon an exploration of undergraduate students' perceptions of clinical decision-making skills in their final year of a baccalaureate adult nursing programme. A phenomenological study was carried out, with a sample of 21 students undertaking their nursing management module. They produced a consensus concept mapping of clinical decision-making and completed self-assessment questionnaires exploring their personal confidence and understanding of clinical decision-making. Twelve students from this group also participated in a focus group interview to further explore their conceptualisation of clinical decision-making. Although the students demonstrated a complex theoretical conceptualisation of clinical decision-making, they tended to focus on the impact of clinical decision-making, and the value of concrete experience rather than the value of cognitive skills in the process and application of decision-making theory to practice. They linked their level of clinical knowledge and experience with their level of skill in clinical decision-making, rather than their cognitive ability. The students identified the patient as the focus of clinical decision-making, and reflected concerns about the personal impact of clinical decision-making on themselves, and the quality of care as the main factors influencing their decisions.
Related Topics
Health Sciences Nursing and Health Professions Nursing
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