Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2647237 | Clinical Simulation in Nursing | 2009 | 8 Pages |
BackgroundThe purpose of this comparative research study was to demonstrate the effect of simulation activities on critical thinking and self-confidence in an electrocardiogram nursing course.MethodThe treatment group (n = 70) received weekly simulation exposure in addition to lecture (500 minutes combined total), and the control group (n = 70) received weekly lecture (400 minutes total didactic instruction).ResultsCritical thinking and self-confidence measures showed no significant differences between the groups, except when controlled by semester level. The second-semester senior students scored significantly higher in both critical thinking and self-confidence measures. A pre- and postsimulation measure of self-confidence demonstrated statistically significant improvement following simulation.ConclusionsHigher critical thinking scores were significantly related to higher self-confidence ratings, as was student employment on a telemetry unit.