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The impact of prior care experience on nursing students' compassionate values and behaviours: A mixed methods study.

Field-Richards, Sarah Elizabeth; Aubeeluck, Aimee; Callaghan, Patrick; Keeley, Philip; Redsell, Sarah Anne; Spiby, Helen; Stacey, Gemma; Lymn, Joanne S

Authors

Sarah Elizabeth Field-Richards

Aimee Aubeeluck

Patrick Callaghan

Philip Keeley

Sarah Anne Redsell

Helen Spiby

Gemma Stacey

Joanne S Lymn



Abstract

Compassion is critical to the provision of high-quality healthcare and is foregrounded internationally as an issue of contemporary concern. Paid care experience prior to nurse training has been suggested as a potential means of improving compassion, which has been characterised by the values and behaviours of care, compassion, competence, communication, courage, and commitment. There is however a dearth of evidence to support the effectiveness of prior care experience as a means of improving compassion in nursing. To explore the impact of paid prior care experience on the values and behaviours of pre-registration nursing students indicated as characterising compassionate care. Longitudinal mixed methods design employing a modified concurrent triangulation strategy, comprising two work packages. Work package 1 was qualitative, and work package 2 adopted a concurrent embedded strategy with a dominant quantitative component. Research is reported in accordance with the Good Reporting of a Mixed Methods Study framework. Three United Kingdom universities. Pre-registration nursing students attending one of three universities, and individuals who had previously participated in a Health Education England paid prior care experience pilot. Participant numbers at time point 1 were questionnaires n = 220, telephone interviews n = 10, and focus groups n = 8. Work package 1 consisted of longitudinal semi-structured telephone interviews. Work package 2 comprised validated online questionnaires measuring emotional intelligence, compassion satisfaction and fatigue, resilience, psychological empowerment, and career commitment (as proxies of compassionate values and behaviours), and focus groups. Qualitative data were thematically analysed. Quantitative data were analysed via Analysis of Variance in SPSS v 26. Qualitative findings suggest that prior care experience has both positive and negative effects on students' compassionate values and behaviours, however positive effects do not extend to qualification. No statistically significant differences were found in any of the quantitative outcome measures between participants with and without paid prior care experience. A statistically significant increase in compassion fatigue was identified in both groups of participants post-qualification. Paid prior care experience did not prevent participants from experiencing reality shock on becoming a student or on qualification. There is insufficient evidence of longitudinal beneficial impact to recommend paid prior care experience as an effective intervention to foster nursing students' compassionate values and behaviours. These findings do not support mandating a period of paid care experience as a prerequisite for entry into nurse education. N/A. Tweetable abstract Insufficient evidence of longitudinal beneficial impact to recommend prior care experience as an effective intervention to foster nursing student compassion @PriorCareExp @Sarah_F_R. [Abstract copyright: Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.]

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 20, 2024
Online Publication Date Feb 24, 2024
Publication Date 2024-05
Deposit Date Apr 9, 2024
Journal International journal of nursing studies
Print ISSN 0020-7489
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 153
Article Number 104732
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2024.104732
Keywords Empathy, Surveys and questionnaires, Focus groups, Universities, Students, nursing, Telephone, Analysis of variance, Emotional intelligence, Courage, Compassion fatigue