Quality Assurance in Nursing Education: A Qualitative Study Involving Students and Newly Graduated Nurses
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
- (1)
- For NQN, having 3–12 months of work experience in Spain and having completed their university education in the years 2017, 2016, or 2015. These criteria were established by considering the possibility to find theory-practice gap results in the most recent alumni.
- (2)
- For 4th-year nursing students, completion of all the theoretical training of the bachelor’s degree and six out of seven internships.
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Improving Clinical Placement Organization
3.1.1. Non-Uniform Learning Structure
“I clearly knew my competences in Practicum 1 and that I was going to be with the nursing assistants, and I think it’s OK, […] but, when I started at the hospital, I had a nurse preceptor who used to laugh: ‘do you really want to be with the assistants? Come with me! Draw blood!’. I would say: ‘I cannot!’, and she replied: ‘Don’t talk nonsense! Nobody is looking’—‘They let me do everything, I was very lucky” (I3).
“It depends on the preceptor. I was in […] and my preceptor let me draw blood and give injections from the very first day, although I understand that we were doing Practicum 1… Anyway, I know that other preceptors did not let students approach patients and made them stay in the background…” (S7).
“Before starting the operating room practicum, we did not know what specific competences we were going to learn. We just had an idea of what is done in that unit. For instance, we knew we were going to prepare the instrumentation, to later find out that we also needed in-depth knowledge about anesthetics, which was not addressed by any document… So, the competences often acquired will depend on your preceptor and, especially, on the preceptor’s view of the service which they work at” (I8).
“On the first day, we were given a sheet which included what we had to check daily together with our preceptor. Then, every day, I would perform as my preceptor generally would, but with special emphasis on the tasks to be performed each time; thus, at the end of the shift, nothing was overlooked. Also, each day before the start, we had to read some literature related to the subject. Maybe this was a bit excessive, but you could catch a glimpse of what you would learn by having some guide notes at hand on the things to be checked and it also encouraged me to look for more info on the subject” (I8).
3.1.2. Rotating Internship Opportunities
“What I would increase indeed is the number of placements, because the range would be broadened, and we could attend a greater number of specialized services” (S8).
“I would have liked to do a greater number of placements, because I did not work in some services, such as maternity or pediatrics” (I5).
“You only spend 25 days per service, so when you are just getting adapted to the patients, the workflow, the organization… you have to leave the placement” (I2).
“Do you think you had enough clinical practice hours?—I think so, I think it is fine to learn the most important things” (I11).
3.1.3. Obliged to be a Clinical Preceptor
“During one practicum, I did have problems with a preceptor. When I arrived and introduced myself, she said: ‘You, student? I said I did not want a student’.—[…] She did not let me do almost anything during the whole rotating internship” (I3).
“What I see is that they feel obliged to do it, many of them do not want to be preceptors” (S5).
“Lack of enthusiasm, little empathy, or little warmth…” (I4).
“In general, how would you assess your relationship with your preceptors?—I think it was very good, because most of them considered us colleagues, and that made us feel good […].—Do you think that the preceptors assigned to you were well-prepared to perform such a role?—Hmm… no, not always. I would say fifty percent according to my experience” (I6).
“How would you assess your relationship with your preceptors?—Good in general, I have never had any problem of confrontation or felt uneasy […]. Do you think they were well-prepared to perform such a role?—Hmm… not hundred percent, but sixty or seventy percent, yes… They might be a little overwhelmed by the role” (I12).
3.2. Revising the Theoretical Curriculum
3.2.1. Relevant vs. Less Relevant Courses
“At the end of the day, we, low-level nurses, do not do management work, and the people chosen for management are required to specialize. Therefore, that course could definitely be removed” (I12).
“‘Alternative Care’ and ‘Culture, Gender, and Health’ courses should be removed because they do not contribute much” (I9).
“I think there are some shortcomings in ‘Clinical Nursing’ and ‘Physiology’; more contents should be taught” (I11).
3.2.2. European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System ECTS Credit Load According to Relevance
“I find it unbalanced that ‘Human and Therapeutic Relationships’ and ‘Culture and Gender’ courses are six credits, as well as ‘Clinical Nursing’, for instance. Clinical Nursing, in my opinion, falls rather short and it would be more interesting if it were longer and other courses were shorter. I think we have gone from a 3-year degree to a 4-year degree and nothing has been done to give more relevance to the courses that really matter” (S1).
“‘Child and Teenage Nursing’ is also important, as well as ‘Emergency’, but I think I would take ‘Complementary Care’ away, or I would make it as an elective course” (I2).
“‘Human and Therapeutic Relationships’ could be merged with ‘Psychosocial Sciences’” (I1).
“The best would be to merge some courses in order to shorten the content load” (S8).
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pre-Established Categories | Main Questions |
---|---|
Clinical training | Are you satisfied with your learning experience in the Practicum? What is your opinion about the organization of the Practicum? Did you find any differences in the organization of the learning among the diverse clinical placements? |
Theoretical/Academic training | Are you satisfied with your learning experience in the classes? Which courses do you think are most important? Can you explain why? Which courses do you think are less important? Can you explain why? Do you think the credit load of the courses is adequate? Would you suggest any improvement? |
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López-Entrambasaguas, O.M.; Calero-García, M.J.; Díaz-Meco-Niño, A.M.; Martínez-Linares, J.M. Quality Assurance in Nursing Education: A Qualitative Study Involving Students and Newly Graduated Nurses. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 240. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010240
López-Entrambasaguas OM, Calero-García MJ, Díaz-Meco-Niño AM, Martínez-Linares JM. Quality Assurance in Nursing Education: A Qualitative Study Involving Students and Newly Graduated Nurses. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(1):240. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010240
Chicago/Turabian StyleLópez-Entrambasaguas, Olga María, María José Calero-García, Ana María Díaz-Meco-Niño, and José Manuel Martínez-Linares. 2020. "Quality Assurance in Nursing Education: A Qualitative Study Involving Students and Newly Graduated Nurses" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 1: 240. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010240
APA StyleLópez-Entrambasaguas, O. M., Calero-García, M. J., Díaz-Meco-Niño, A. M., & Martínez-Linares, J. M. (2020). Quality Assurance in Nursing Education: A Qualitative Study Involving Students and Newly Graduated Nurses. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(1), 240. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010240