Impact of Simulation-Enhanced Pharmacology Education in Prelicensure Nursing Education.

Jill Steiner Sanko, Mary Mckay
Author Information
  1. Jill Steiner Sanko: Author Affiliations: Assistant Professor, School of Nursing and Health Studies (Dr Sanko); and Associate Professor of Clinical, Associate Dean of Undergraduate Programs (Dr Mckay), School of Nursing and Health Studies, University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida.

Abstract

Student and novice nurses are susceptible to committing medication errors related to lack of experience. To address medication safety, a quasi-experimental design (N = 120) was used to test the effect of adding simulation to an undergraduate nursing pharmacology course on students' confidence and competence, medication adverse events, and observed medication administration practices. Students who received simulation-enhanced pharmacology demonstrated important improvements in medication administration safety. Implementing simulation in nursing pharmacology curriculum is consistent with recommendations to implement Quality and Safety Education for Nurses competencies into nursing education.

MeSH Term

Clinical Competence
Curriculum
Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate
Humans
Medication Errors
Nursing Education Research
Nursing Evaluation Research
Nursing Methodology Research
Patient Simulation
Pharmacology
Self Efficacy
Students, Nursing

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0medicationnursingpharmacologyEducationsafetysimulationadministrationStudentnovicenursessusceptiblecommittingerrorsrelatedlackexperienceaddressquasi-experimentaldesignN=120usedtesteffectaddingundergraduatecoursestudents'confidencecompetenceadverseeventsobservedpracticesStudentsreceivedsimulation-enhanceddemonstratedimportantimprovementsImplementingcurriculumconsistentrecommendationsimplementQualitySafetyNursescompetencieseducationImpactSimulation-EnhancedPharmacologyPrelicensureNursing

Similar Articles

Cited By