Journal of professional nursing : official journal of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing
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In the COVID-19 pandemic process, nursing students, who are the nurses of the future, have witnessed a different professional experience. ⋯ Nursing students can cope with the crisis during the COVID-19 process.
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Compassionate, competent, and holistic care is at the core of palliative care nursing. Knowledge of primary palliative care concepts is a fundamental expectation of graduating nursing students. The release of updated national educational competencies in palliative care coupled with a new palliative care curriculum for prelicensure nursing students created a need to measure acquisition of new knowledge. ⋯ Initial pilot testing in a sample of 262 nursing students demonstrated good internal consistency (Cronbach's α = 0.70), with a 2-factor model that aligns with multiple national expectations for primary palliative care. This study is the first to align knowledge items with national palliative care competencies and care domains. Further psychometric testing will be conducted as well as large multisite research collaborations to test curriculum implementation and use this knowledge measure in prelicensure nursing education.
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As the demographics in the United States continue to change, nurses must deliver care to patients from diverse cultural backgrounds. Cultural humility is a lifelong process of self-reflection which is also defined by that individual. It allows an individual to be open to other people's identities, which is core to the nursing standard of providing holistic care. ⋯ One of the ways to achieve cultural humility in nursing is to train future faculty to become agents of cultural humility. This also helps to create a pipeline of nurses who have respect and empathy for the patients they serve. The aims of this paper include: 1) define cultural humility and its importance to healthcare professionals; 2) explore the intrapersonal, interpersonal, and system levels of cultural humility; 3) provide insight on how to promote cultural humility; 4) reflect on best practices across a variety of healthcare disciplines; and 5) provide suggestions for practice.
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The curricula of undergraduate nursing programs lack education in palliative and end-of-life care. If the topic is covered, it is generally within isolated lectures and rarely as a full course. ⋯ This paper describes the development and delivery of an undergraduate-level online nursing elective course in palliative and end-of-life care offered through a large public university. Innovative elements of the course include practicing difficult conversations using technology to enable active student engagement in an online environment, a serious game involving individual role play for treatment decision making, and special topic weeks allowing a deeper dive into seldom discussed populations such as the homeless, which the students described as playing an important role in contributing to their learning.
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Recognizing the relationship of keen observation to communication, critical thinking, and leadership in evidence-based literature, educators have expanded the use of art museums to augment visual intelligence skills. The purpose of this pilot intervention was to evaluate an innovative, interdisciplinary approach for integrating visual intelligence skills into an advanced communications and collaboration course. ⋯ Healthcare providers' ability to communicate effectively, including observing, listening, explaining, and empathizing, significantly impacts healthcare outcomes and patient perceptions of satisfaction. All educators have access to a variety of two-dimensional art and the opportunity to implement interdisciplinary learning experiences to enhance visual intelligence. The intervention was considered a successful new learning modality for advanced communications skills and was integrated into the curriculum.