ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Effect of Video-Based Teaching on Urinary Catheterization Skills

T

T.C. ORDU ÜNİVERSİTESİ

Status

Completed

Conditions

Nursing Caries

Treatments

Other: Video

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06561737
Video effect

Details and patient eligibility

About

Urinary catheters, which can be urethral or suprapubic, are frequently used to measure urine output, control urinary output during surgery, and provide urine output in individuals with urinary excretion problems such as urinary incontinence and urinary retention (Chadha et al., 2024; Feneley, Hopley, & Wells, 2015). This practice, which has an important place in patient safety, should be explained to nursing students in line with current evidence-based knowledge, and students should have access to up-to-date information and improve their skills in this regard (Aldridge & Hummel, 2019; Güven Özdemir & Kaya, 2023). However, nursing students may not have the opportunity to perform this practice in the clinical field due to the high risk of infection and the fact that the practice requires more sensitivity in terms of privacy than many other practices (Aksoy & Paslı Gürdoğan, 2022; Chang, 2022; Güven Özdemir & Kaya, 2023). This situation may prevent students from reinforcing their knowledge and skills, and therefore, after graduation, newly graduated nurses may not have the opportunity to practice this practice in their working life (Aksoy & Paslı Gürdoğan, 2022; Chang, 2022; Güven Özdemir & Kaya, 2023).

Full description

In nursing education, the combination of cognitive, psychomotor and attitudinal behaviors has an important place in the acquisition of professional skills. In the acquisition of psychomotor skills, educational teaching methods such as role playing, skill lists, simulator technologies, scenario-based trainings and video demonstrations are used (Filiz & Dikmen, 2017;McEnroe et al., 2020; Pivac et al., 2021). Smartphones and the internet, which have entered our lives with the developing technology, have led students to acquire new learning environments (McEnroe et al., 2020). Students have the opportunity to easily access the applications of the courses they want to research or watch on the internet. This situation has revealed the need to change the approach of today's nursing students to learning methods. Especially videos with skill-based trainings facilitate nursing students to learn skills (Mete & Uysal, 2010). The use of video demonstrations in education and training can make learning more enjoyable by visualizing the information as well as contributing to the reinforcement of the information learned, keeping it in memory and remembering it in the future. Using the video of the skill to be acquired in the learning process allows students to visualize and interpret the skill in their minds (Korhan et al., 2016).

Based on Bandura's Social Learning Theory and adapted from Applied Behavior Analysis, the Video Modeling Method aims for the individual to learn by observing. Video self-modeling practices are used for the acquisition of new skills, fluency in previously acquired skills, and reduction of problem behaviors. This practice first emerged in the early 1970s and its use in educational settings has been developing more slowly compared to other methods (Buggey & Ogle, 2012). This is a practice based on showing images of individuals performing the target behavior appropriately in order to enable them to exhibit new behaviors or skills (Dowrick & Hood, 1981).

It is very important for nursing students to recognize their own abilities, develop their skills and take responsibility for their learning. In a study investigating the methods preferred by undergraduate nursing students in learning the psychomotor skills required for clinical practice, students reported that clinical skills laboratory practice helped them learn on their own, they felt more sense of control and felt more confident in patient care (Ekeri Açıkgöz & Karaca, 2014).

As much as the learning methods used in education and training of nursing students, the evaluation of the developed skill, the student's ability to see the student's mistakes and to recognize these mistakes are as important as the learning methods used in education and training.

Enrollment

112 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • A first-year student in the department of nursing,
  • smartphone users,
  • taking the nursing principles course for the first time, t
  • those who volunteered to participate in the study.

Exclusion criteria

  • Graduating from health vocational high school,
  • having previous knowledge of urinary catheter placement skills,
  • wanting to withdraw from the study at any stage.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

112 participants in 2 patient groups

Video group
Experimental group
Description:
For the students in the experimental group, the application was first demonstrated on a model by the course instructor, after which each student was required to perform the application individually. While the students were performing the application, someone not part of the research team recorded them on their phones. During the application, two researchers independently assessed the student's skills using the application checklist. Afterward, the students were asked to watch their videos and evaluate themselves over a 15-day period. After 15 days, the students were called back and asked to perform the same application again. At this stage, the researchers once again evaluated the students independently.
Treatment:
Other: Video
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
The process of insertion and removal of urinary catheterization was first explained to the students in the control group by the instructor of the course in the research team by demonstrations on the models. Then, each student was allowed to perform the application. Then, all students were invited again 15 days later for the second application. In both applications, the students were evaluated independently by the researchers.

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2025 Veeva Systems