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The Impact of Pedagogical Framework in Education of Neonatal Resuscitation

U

University of Lahore

Status

Completed

Conditions

Nursing Students Education on Neonatal Resuscitation

Treatments

Other: Traditional Method
Other: Pedagogical Framework (Learn, See, Practice, Prove, Do, and Maintain)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04748341
IRB-UOL-FAHS/775/2020

Details and patient eligibility

About

Virtually 10% of newborns suffer respiratory distress at birth thus need intervention from proficient health professionals. Pakistan is one of the top ten countries that carry two-thirds of the global burden of neonatal deaths. It is suggested that most of these deaths can be prevented through the provision of trained emergency birth attendants, in which education plays an integral role. Since its inception in the neonatal resuscitation program, we are still in the struggle to find out the best strategies to disseminate NRP knowledge, training, and guidelines that promise the best outcome. Hence, little published data on this phenomenon is available regarding undergraduate students. That determines the best way to educate them in performing the skills that urgently require an infrequent needed such as neonatal resuscitation. Therefore, this study intended to address this gap in the education of neonatal resuscitation through two different approaches. One is a traditional 2-step method and the other is an adapted Pedagogical framework (Lean, See, Practice, Prove, Do and Maintain).

Full description

Globally, nurses are the largest workforce in the healthcare system that are directly engaged in the provision of newborn care. They should be conversant and competent in neonatal resuscitation. However, the majority of nurses are not skillful in the respective field. The situation is not very different when we are talking about nursing students. Who are our future workforce, hence are found incompetent in emergency newborn management and neonatal resuscitation. It is well documented that effective educational programs in preservice settings such as schools of midwifery, nursing, and medicine, established more active forms of lifelong learning to improve the quality of care. While the transformation of theoretical knowledge into clinical practice requires effective teaching in the field of resuscitation is a vital element for all undergraduate students. However, like many other developing countries in Pakistan, mostly traditional methods are following in nursing education. While the traditional method of teaching is insufficient to meet the educational demands of nursing students in clinical practice. Hence, Nursing students often are unprepared and lacking confidence in simple, yet life-saving procedures such as neonatal resuscitation. Therefore, incorporating an effective model and framework in nursing education is needed that could enhance nursing students' skills and improve clinical outcomes. The "Learn, See, Practice, Prove, Do, and Maintain" (LSPPDM) pedagogy is one of such frameworks synthesized after intensely reviewing the literature. This framework is acting as a guiding path for educators in teaching and learning procedural skills. As Knowledge is considering a prerequisite for competence in skill performance and to evaluate the effectiveness of an educational program self -efficacy measurement is an important tool. Thus, the important variables knowledge, self-efficacy, and skill have been selected for this study. Thus, the study objective will be:

To compare the knowledge, skill, and self-efficacy among undergraduate nursing students learning of neonatal resuscitation through "Learn, See, Practice, Prove, Do, Maintain pedagogy" as compared to those who will learn through the traditional method.

This study will contribute essentially to determine the effectiveness of an adapted pedagogical framework in the teaching and learning of neonatal resuscitation skills, especially in a resource-limited society. Moreover, the study findings will help the organization to develop strategies for improving nursing education.

Enrollment

62 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 25 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Are currently enrolled in the Bachelor of Science in Nursing (4 years) 3rd and 4th Professional.
  • Those willing to attend the full course of neonatal resuscitation.
  • Having age 18-25 years.
  • Those willing to give informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • Will be on leave from that period
  • Have already received any educational training on neonatal resuscitation.
  • Working as Nursing Assistants in Clinical Setting.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

62 participants in 2 patient groups

Traditional Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Group A will be taught through the two steps traditional method (2 lectures/week + 1 skill lab/week). First, learn through didactic Lectures and then practice skills on the Mannequins. The educational lecture content will be the same for both groups.
Treatment:
Other: Traditional Method
Pedagogical Group
Experimental group
Description:
Group B will learn through the 5-step method \[ 2 lectures/week + video + 2skill lab/week (1 session under instructor + 1 session for skill maintenance)\], learn skill, see the video on resuscitation, practice on simulator, prove through practice, observe skill on clinical rotation and lastly maintain it through clinical supplemented with simulation.
Treatment:
Other: Pedagogical Framework (Learn, See, Practice, Prove, Do, and Maintain)

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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