Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1076670 International Journal of Nursing Studies 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesThe study aim was to examine how Registered Nurses identify and respond to deteriorating patients during in-hospital simulation exercises.DesignMixed methods study using simulated actors.SettingA rural hospital in Victoria, Australia.ParticipantsThirty-four Registered Nurses each completed two simulation exercises.MethodsData were obtained from the following sources: (a) Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) rating to assess performance of Registered Nurses during two simulation exercises (chest pain and respiratory distress); (b) video footage of the simulation exercises; (c) reflective interview during participants’ review of video footage. Qualitative thematic analysis of video and interview data was undertaken.ResultsThemes generated from the data were: (1) exhausting autonomous decision-making; (2) misinterpreting the evidence; (3) conditioned response; and (4) missed cues. Assessment steps were more likely to be omitted in the chest pain simulation, for which there was a hospital protocol in place.ConclusionsVideo review revealed additional insights into nurses’ decision-making that were not evident from OSCE scoring alone. Feedback during video review was a highly valued component of the simulation exercises.

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