Psychological Safety in Nursing Simulation.

Sook Jung Kang, Hae Young Min
Author Information
  1. Sook Jung Kang: Author affiliations: Assistant Professor (Dr Kang), College of Nursing, Ewha Womans University, Seoul; and Assistant Professor (Dr Min), College of Nursing and Healthcare Sciences, Dong-Eui University, Busan, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although nursing students enjoy and learn from simulation practice, some experience negative feelings that may hamper their learning outcomes.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to understand nursing students' perceptions of psychological safety in simulation practice to provide a foundation for a safe and effective simulation learning environment.
METHODS: A convenient sample of 15 undergraduate nursing students was included in this study. Focus group interviews and inductive content analysis were used for this study.
RESULTS: Four themes extracted from the study included feeling unready, anxious about having students' mistakes exposed, worry about damaging teamwork, and fear of evaluation.
CONCLUSIONS: Findings indicated that providing prebriefing and considering students' level of simulation experience in sharing their recorded video may help ensure a psychologically safe environment. An instrument measuring psychological safety and evidence-based guidelines to ensure a safe learning environment needs to be developed.

MeSH Term

Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate
Emotions
Female
Focus Groups
Humans
Learning
Nursing Education Research
Nursing Evaluation Research
Safety
Simulation Training
Students, Nursing

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0simulationstudynursinglearningstudents'safeenvironmentstudentspracticeexperiencemaypsychologicalsafetyincludedensureBACKGROUND:AlthoughenjoylearnnegativefeelingshamperoutcomesPURPOSE:purposeunderstandperceptionsprovidefoundationeffectiveMETHODS:convenientsample15undergraduateFocusgroupinterviewsinductivecontentanalysisusedRESULTS:FourthemesextractedfeelingunreadyanxiousmistakesexposedworrydamagingteamworkfearevaluationCONCLUSIONS:Findingsindicatedprovidingprebriefingconsideringlevelsharingrecordedvideohelppsychologicallyinstrumentmeasuringevidence-basedguidelinesneedsdevelopedPsychologicalSafetyNursingSimulation

Similar Articles

Cited By (13)