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Nursing students' spiritual talks with patients – evaluation of a partnership learning programme in clinical practice
Author(s) -
Strand Kari,
Carlsen Liv B,
Tveit Bodil
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.13497
Subject(s) - nursing , spiritual care , general partnership , competence (human resources) , nurse education , bachelor , medicine , psychology , focus group , medical education , spirituality , sociology , alternative medicine , social psychology , archaeology , finance , pathology , anthropology , economics , history
Aims and objectives To evaluate the impact of a partnership learning programme designed to support undergraduate nursing students' competence in speaking with patients about spiritual issues. Background Spiritual care is an oft‐neglected and underexposed area of nursing practice. Despite the increasing amount of research on spiritual care in educational programmes, little is known about nursing students' experiences with existential/spiritual talks and the process of learning about spiritual care in the clinical placement. Design The project used a qualitative evaluation design to evaluate the impact of a partnership‐initiated intervention focusing on student learning of spiritual care in a hospital ward. Methods Data were collected through three focus group interviews with bachelor of nursing students from one Norwegian university college and supplemented with notes. Data were analysed by means of qualitative interpretative content analysis. Results The intervention was found to enhance students' competence in spiritual talks. The students developed an extended understanding of spirituality, became more confident in speaking with patients about spiritual issues and more active in grasping opportunities to provide spiritual care. Participating nurses significantly contributed to the students’ learning process by being role models, mentoring the students and challenging them to overcome barriers in speaking with patients about spiritual issues. Conclusions The partnership learning programme proved to be a useful model in terms of enhancing students’ confidence in speaking with patients about spiritual concerns. Relevance to clinical practice Collaboration between nursing university colleges and clinical placements could help nursing students and clinical nurses to develop competencies in spiritual care and bridge the gap between academic education and clinical education, to the benefit of both.