When are night shifts effective for nursing student clinical learning? Findings from a mixed-method study design
Some nursing programmes offer night shifts for students while others do not, mainly due to the lack of evidence regarding their effectiveness on clinical learning. The principal aims of the study were to describe nursing students' perceptions and to explore conditions influencing effectiveness...
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Published in: | Nurse education today Vol. 52; pp. 15 - 21 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Scotland
Elsevier Ltd
01-05-2017
Elsevier Science Ltd |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Some nursing programmes offer night shifts for students while others do not, mainly due to the lack of evidence regarding their effectiveness on clinical learning.
The principal aims of the study were to describe nursing students' perceptions and to explore conditions influencing effectiveness on learning processes during night shifts.
An explanatory mixed-method study design composed of a cross-sectional study (primary method, first phase) followed by a descriptive phenomenological study design (secondary method, second phase) in 2015.
Two bachelor of nursing degree programmes located in Northern Italy, three years in length and requiring night shifts for students starting in the second semester of the 1st year, were involved.
First phase: all nursing students ending their last clinical placement of the academic year attended were eligible; 352 out the 370 participated. Second phase: a purposeful sample of nine students among those included in the first phase and who attended the highest amount of night shifts were interviewed.
First phase: a questionnaire composed of closed and open-ended questions was adopted; data was analyzed through descriptive statistical methods. Second phase: an open-ended face-to-face audio-recorded interview was adopted and data was analyzed through content analysis.
Findings from the quantitative phase, showed that students who attended night shifts reported satisfaction (44.7%) less frequently than those who attended only day shifts (55.9%). They also reported boredom (23.5%) significantly more often compared to day shift students (p=0001). Understanding of the nursing role and learning competence was significantly inferior among night shift students as compared to day shift students, while the perception of wasting time was significantly higher among night shift students compared to their counterparts. Night shift students performed nursing rounds (288; 98.2%), non-nursing tasks (247; 84.3%) and/or less often managed clinical problems (insomnia 37; 12.6% and disorientation/confusion 32; 10.9%). Findings from the qualitative phase showed night shifts are experienced by students as a “time potentially capable of generating clinical learning”: learning is maximized when students play an active role, encounter patients' clinical problems and develop relationships with patients, caregivers and staff.
Night shifts remains ambiguous from the students' perspective and their introduction in nursing education should be approached with care, considering the learning aims expected by students in their clinical placements and the education of clinical mentors education who should be capable of effectively involving students in the process of night care by avoiding non-nursing tasks.
•Night shifts are ambiguous in students’ perceptions: they report satisfaction with night shifts but these shifts are not preferred because of the risk of wasting time, boredom, and of being involved in non-nursing tasks.•Night shifts offered to students should involve experiences with a high impact on their clinical learning avoiding inactive roles or non-nursing tasks. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0260-6917 1532-2793 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.nedt.2017.02.005 |