Interprofessional communication in a simulation-based team training session in healthcare: A student perspective

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Standard

Interprofessional communication in a simulation-based team training session in healthcare : A student perspective. / Aase, Ingunn; Aase, Karina; Dieckmann, Gerhard Peter; Bjørshol, Conrad Arnfinn; Hansen, Britt Sætre.

In: Journal of Nursing Education and Practice, Vol. 6, No. 7, 2016, p. 91-100.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Aase, I, Aase, K, Dieckmann, GP, Bjørshol, CA & Hansen, BS 2016, 'Interprofessional communication in a simulation-based team training session in healthcare: A student perspective', Journal of Nursing Education and Practice, vol. 6, no. 7, pp. 91-100. https://doi.org/10.5430/jnep.v6n7p91

APA

Aase, I., Aase, K., Dieckmann, G. P., Bjørshol, C. A., & Hansen, B. S. (2016). Interprofessional communication in a simulation-based team training session in healthcare: A student perspective. Journal of Nursing Education and Practice, 6(7), 91-100. https://doi.org/10.5430/jnep.v6n7p91

Vancouver

Aase I, Aase K, Dieckmann GP, Bjørshol CA, Hansen BS. Interprofessional communication in a simulation-based team training session in healthcare: A student perspective. Journal of Nursing Education and Practice. 2016;6(7):91-100. https://doi.org/10.5430/jnep.v6n7p91

Author

Aase, Ingunn ; Aase, Karina ; Dieckmann, Gerhard Peter ; Bjørshol, Conrad Arnfinn ; Hansen, Britt Sætre. / Interprofessional communication in a simulation-based team training session in healthcare : A student perspective. In: Journal of Nursing Education and Practice. 2016 ; Vol. 6, No. 7. pp. 91-100.

Bibtex

@article{35cc33fdf2a943959e30a1618e60a9ac,
title = "Interprofessional communication in a simulation-based team training session in healthcare: A student perspective",
abstract = "Background: Interprofessional teamwork and communication training have entered the healthcare education setting, mainly investigated through surveys. However, little is known about the student{\textquoteright}s perceptions in more depth. The aim of the study was to investigate healthcare students{\textquoteright} perspectives and attitudes towards interprofessional communication in a simulation-based training session.Methods: The study was designed as an explorative case study based on qualitative content analysis Data was based on observation of two simulation scenarios (“Internal Bleeding”, “Huddle”) and analysis of debriefing sessions with a sample of 48 nursing and medical students in Norway. The study was conducted in May 2013.Results: We found that interprofessional communication was characterized by two main features: clinical exchange and collaborative exchange. While clinical exchange is “objective” and dependent upon clinical information, clinical skills, and standardized tools and procedures (e.g. SBAR), collaborative exchange is less “formal” and relies on dialogue, cross-disciplinary knowledge and role identity. Students seem to direct most of their attention to clinical exchange, while the patient perspective seems less explicit in the training session.Conclusion: Exploring the student perspective of interprofessional communication has the following implications for the design and implementation of simulation-based training sessions: (a) to balance clinical exchange and collaborative exchange, (b) to introduce patient-centered exchange, and (c) to contextualize standardized communication tools such as SBAR.",
author = "Ingunn Aase and Karina Aase and Dieckmann, {Gerhard Peter} and Bj{\o}rshol, {Conrad Arnfinn} and Hansen, {Britt S{\ae}tre}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.5430/jnep.v6n7p91",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "91--100",
journal = "Journal of Nursing Education and Practice",
issn = "1925-4040",
publisher = "Sciedu Press",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interprofessional communication in a simulation-based team training session in healthcare

T2 - A student perspective

AU - Aase, Ingunn

AU - Aase, Karina

AU - Dieckmann, Gerhard Peter

AU - Bjørshol, Conrad Arnfinn

AU - Hansen, Britt Sætre

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Background: Interprofessional teamwork and communication training have entered the healthcare education setting, mainly investigated through surveys. However, little is known about the student’s perceptions in more depth. The aim of the study was to investigate healthcare students’ perspectives and attitudes towards interprofessional communication in a simulation-based training session.Methods: The study was designed as an explorative case study based on qualitative content analysis Data was based on observation of two simulation scenarios (“Internal Bleeding”, “Huddle”) and analysis of debriefing sessions with a sample of 48 nursing and medical students in Norway. The study was conducted in May 2013.Results: We found that interprofessional communication was characterized by two main features: clinical exchange and collaborative exchange. While clinical exchange is “objective” and dependent upon clinical information, clinical skills, and standardized tools and procedures (e.g. SBAR), collaborative exchange is less “formal” and relies on dialogue, cross-disciplinary knowledge and role identity. Students seem to direct most of their attention to clinical exchange, while the patient perspective seems less explicit in the training session.Conclusion: Exploring the student perspective of interprofessional communication has the following implications for the design and implementation of simulation-based training sessions: (a) to balance clinical exchange and collaborative exchange, (b) to introduce patient-centered exchange, and (c) to contextualize standardized communication tools such as SBAR.

AB - Background: Interprofessional teamwork and communication training have entered the healthcare education setting, mainly investigated through surveys. However, little is known about the student’s perceptions in more depth. The aim of the study was to investigate healthcare students’ perspectives and attitudes towards interprofessional communication in a simulation-based training session.Methods: The study was designed as an explorative case study based on qualitative content analysis Data was based on observation of two simulation scenarios (“Internal Bleeding”, “Huddle”) and analysis of debriefing sessions with a sample of 48 nursing and medical students in Norway. The study was conducted in May 2013.Results: We found that interprofessional communication was characterized by two main features: clinical exchange and collaborative exchange. While clinical exchange is “objective” and dependent upon clinical information, clinical skills, and standardized tools and procedures (e.g. SBAR), collaborative exchange is less “formal” and relies on dialogue, cross-disciplinary knowledge and role identity. Students seem to direct most of their attention to clinical exchange, while the patient perspective seems less explicit in the training session.Conclusion: Exploring the student perspective of interprofessional communication has the following implications for the design and implementation of simulation-based training sessions: (a) to balance clinical exchange and collaborative exchange, (b) to introduce patient-centered exchange, and (c) to contextualize standardized communication tools such as SBAR.

U2 - 10.5430/jnep.v6n7p91

DO - 10.5430/jnep.v6n7p91

M3 - Review

VL - 6

SP - 91

EP - 100

JO - Journal of Nursing Education and Practice

JF - Journal of Nursing Education and Practice

SN - 1925-4040

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 176993443