Educational Technology Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Realistic Simulation and Digital Educational Platforms for Learning Nursing Student: Randomized Clinical Trial
Teaching modalities that integrate digital educational technologies, such as educational games, dummies and simulated environments, develop critical thinking in students, the absorption of significant learning and the consequent reduction in the exposure of patients to the damage associated with health care. Thus, this study will evaluate the effectiveness of simulation strategies and digital educational platforms in the teaching-learning process, in self-confidence and its implications for the physiological variables and stressful feelings of undergraduate nursing students. Our hypothesis is that students submitted to the use of digital platforms will present lower levels of self-efficacy, capacity for clinical judgment and retention of knowledge when compared to those who were submitted to the simulation strategy.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 100 |
Est. completion date | September 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | March 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: Aged over 18 years; Students approved in the discipline related to nursing care for adult and elderly patients. Exclusion Criteria: Students who actively work in the scenario of patient care in critical and risk situations; Members of the Realistic Health Simulation League; Students with previous training in the health area (nursing technicians, firefighters, among others) ; Participants who for some reason are absent from one of the project stages. - |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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University of Brasilia |
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Blanié A, Amorim MA, Meffert A, Perrot C, Dondelli L, Benhamou D. Assessing validity evidence for a serious game dedicated to patient clinical deterioration and communication. Adv Simul (Lond). 2020 May 27;5:4. doi: 10.1186/s41077-020-00123-3. eCollection 2020. — View Citation
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Nieto Fernández-Pacheco A, Castro Delgado R, Arcos González P, Navarro Fernández JL, Cerón Madrigal JJ, Juguera Rodriguez L, Perez Alonso N, Armero-Barranco D, Lidon López Iborra M, Damian ET, Pardo Rios M. Analysis of performance and stress caused by a simulation of a mass casualty incident. Nurse Educ Today. 2018 Mar;62:52-57. doi: 10.1016/j.nedt.2017.12.016. Epub 2017 Dec 15. — View Citation
Silveira MS, Cogo ALP. The contributions of digital technologies in the teaching of nursing skills: an integrative review. Rev Gaucha Enferm. 2017 Jul 13;38(2):e66204. doi: 10.1590/1983-1447.2017.02.66204. Review. Portuguese, English. — View Citation
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* Note: There are 11 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
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Primary | Cognitive Performance (Baseline) | Application of a questionnaire with ten multiple choice questions to assess the knowledge of nursing students about signs and sepsis symptoms | Applied before the intervention | |
Primary | Cognitive Performance (Post-Test) | Application of a questionnaire with ten multiple choice questions to assess the knowledge of nursing students about signs and sepsis symptoms | Applied immediately after the intervention | |
Primary | Cognitive Performance (Retention over time) | Application of a questionnaire with ten multiple choice questions to assess the knowledge of nursing students about signs and sepsis symptoms | Applied thirty days after the intervention | |
Primary | Cognitive Performance (Retention over time) | Application of a questionnaire with ten multiple choice questions to assess the knowledge of nursing students about signs and sepsis symptoms | Applied sixty days after the intervention | |
Primary | Clinical Judgment (Baseline) | Evaluation of the development of clinical reasoning of nursing students. The instrument Lasater clinical Judgment Rubric (LCJR)- Brazilian Version will be used. It assesses 11 dimensions at four levels of clinical judgment (recognition, interpretation, response, reflection). The total score ranges from 11 to 44, where the "initial" level generates one point, the "in development" level generates two points, the "proficient" level generates three points and the "exemplary" level generates four points. | Applied before the intervention | |
Primary | Clinical Judgment | Evaluation of the development of clinical reasoning of nursing students. The instrument Lasater clinical Judgment Rubric (LCJR) - Brazilian Version will be used. It assesses 11 dimensions at four levels of clinical judgment (recognition, interpretation, response, reflection). The total score ranges from 11 to 44, where the "initial" level generates one point, the "in development" level generates two points, the "proficient" level generates three points and the "exemplary" level generates four points . | Applied immediately after the intervention | |
Primary | Clinical Judgment | Evaluation of the development of clinical reasoning of nursing students. The instrument Lasater clinical Judgment Rubric (LCJR) - Brazilian Version will be used. It assesses 11 dimensions at four levels of clinical judgment (recognition, interpretation, response, reflection). The total score ranges from 11 to 44, where the "initial" level generates one point, the "in development" level generates two points, the "proficient" level generates three points and the "exemplary" level generates four points. | Applied thirty days after the intervention | |
Primary | Clinical Judgment | Evaluation of the development of clinical reasoning of nursing students. The instrument Lasater Clinical Judgment Rubric (LCJR) - Brazilian Version will be used. It assesses 11 dimensions at four levels of clinical judgment (recognition, interpretation, response, reflection). The total score ranges from 11 to 44, where the "initial" level generates one point, the "in development" level generates two points, the "proficient" level generates three points and the "exemplary" level generates four points . | Applied sixty days after the intervention | |
Primary | Self-efficacy (Baseline) | Assessment of satisfaction, learning, individual performance after educational actions. A self-efficacy scale will be used. IT'S self-applicable and has 13 items related to beliefs about their own abilities, motivation for action, coping with obstacles, predisposition to challenge, openness to experience, resilience in the face of failures, the influence of initial success on the the final success of an activity and the history of previous successes. These items are represented by a Likert-type scale of agreement, containing five points, in which 1 represents the participant's total disagreement and 5 the total agreement. Scores above 2.5 indicate that participants feel very capable. | Applied before the intervention | |
Primary | Self-efficacy | Assessment of satisfaction, learning, individual performance after educational actions. A self-efficacy scale will be used. IT'S self-applicable and has 13 items related to beliefs about their own abilities, motivation for action, coping with obstacles, predisposition to challenge, openness to experience, resilience in the face of failures, the influence of initial success on the the final success of an activity and the history of previous successes. These items are represented by a Likert-type scale of agreement, containing five points, in which 1 represents the participant's total disagreement and 5 the total agreement. Scores above 2.5 indicate that participants feel very capable. | Applied immediately after the intervention | |
Primary | Self-efficacy | Assessment of satisfaction, learning, individual performance after educational actions. A self-efficacy scale will be used. IT'S self-applicable and has 13 items related to beliefs about their own abilities, motivation for action, coping with obstacles, predisposition to challenge, openness to experience, resilience in the face of failures, the influence of initial success on the the final success of an activity and the history of previous successes. These items are represented by a Likert-type scale of agreement, containing five points, in which 1 represents the participant's total disagreement and 5 the total agreement. Scores above 2.5 indicate that participants feel very capable. | Applied thirty days after the intervention | |
Primary | Self-efficacy | Assessment of satisfaction, learning, individual performance after educational actions. A self-efficacy scale will be used. IT'S self-applicable and has 13 items related to beliefs about their own abilities, motivation for action, coping with obstacles, predisposition to challenge, openness to experience, resilience in the face of failures, the influence of initial success on the the final success of an activity and the history of previous successes. These items are represented by a Likert-type scale of agreement, containing five points, in which 1 represents the participant's total disagreement and 5 the total agreement. Scores above 2.5 indicate that participants feel very capable. | Applied sixty days after the intervention | |
Secondary | Student stress (Baseline) | Assessment of the intensity of stress among nursing students caused by pedagogical strategies: high-fidelity simulation and digital educational platforms. The questionnaire will be applied. It consists of 31 items and the answers are Likert type, scored from 0 to 3, depending on the degree of concern it generates for the student, as follows: nothing (0), a little (1), a lot (2) and extremely ( 3). | Before the intervention | |
Secondary | Student stress | Assessment of the intensity of stress among nursing students caused by pedagogical strategies: high-fidelity simulation and digital educational platforms. The questionnaire will be applied. It consists of 31 items and the answers are Likert type, scored from 0 to 3, depending on the degree of concern it generates for the student, as follows: nothing (0), a little (1), a lot (2) and extremely ( 3). | Applied immediately after the intervention | |
Secondary | Student stress | Assessment of the intensity of stress among nursing students caused by pedagogical strategies: high-fidelity simulation and digital educational platforms. The questionnaire will be applied. It consists of 31 items and the answers are Likert type, scored from 0 to 3, depending on the degree of concern it generates for the student, as follows: nothing (0), a little (1), a lot (2) and extremely ( 3). | Applied thirty days after the intervention | |
Secondary | Student stress | Assessment of the intensity of stress among nursing students caused by pedagogical strategies: high-fidelity simulation and digital educational platforms. The questionnaire will be applied. It consists of 31 items and the answers are Likert type, scored from 0 to 3, depending on the degree of concern it generates for the student, as follows: nothing (0), a little (1), a lot (2) and extremely ( 3). | Applied sixty days after the intervention |
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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Completed |
NCT02674477 -
Treatment Engagement With Technology-assisted Treatment
|
N/A |