Using high fidelity simulation to impact occupational therapy student knowledge, comfort, and confidence in acute care

Background: As the demand for occupational and physical therapists in acute care settings is increasing, students are reporting a need for increased educational preparation to handle the complexities they may face in this setting. This pretest/posttest study examines the impact of an inter-profess...

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Main Authors: Debra M. Gibbs, Mary S. Dietrich, Emmy Dagnan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Western Michigan University 2017-01-01
Series:Open Journal of Occupational Therapy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.15453/2168-6408.1225
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spelling doaj-b77b446adc284352af35a24d5e1782b02020-11-24T22:21:42ZengWestern Michigan University Open Journal of Occupational Therapy 2168-64082168-64082017-01-015110.15453/2168-6408.1225Using high fidelity simulation to impact occupational therapy student knowledge, comfort, and confidence in acute careDebra M. GibbsMary S. DietrichEmmy DagnanBackground: As the demand for occupational and physical therapists in acute care settings is increasing, students are reporting a need for increased educational preparation to handle the complexities they may face in this setting. This pretest/posttest study examines the impact of an inter-professional high fidelity simulation experience on perceived levels of knowledge, comfort, and confidence among occupational therapy doctorate students when handling an acutely ill patient in an ICU setting. Methods: Two cohorts of occupational therapy students participated in an inter-professional acute care scenario with high fidelity simulation mannequins (Cohort 1, n = 19; Cohort 2, n = 27). Before and after the simulation, the students rated their perceived level of knowledge, comfort, and confidence with handling acutely ill patients. Results: A two-tailed Wilcoxin Signed-Ranks indicated that posttest ranks were statistically significantly higher than pretest ranks with α = .05 indicating improvement in students’ perceived levels of knowledge, comfort, and confidence after participating in an acute care simulation. Conclusion: High fidelity simulation can positively impact students’ perceptions of their knowledge, comfort, and confidence in handling acutely ill patients.http://dx.doi.org/10.15453/2168-6408.1225acute careeducationoccupational therapysimulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Debra M. Gibbs
Mary S. Dietrich
Emmy Dagnan
spellingShingle Debra M. Gibbs
Mary S. Dietrich
Emmy Dagnan
Using high fidelity simulation to impact occupational therapy student knowledge, comfort, and confidence in acute care
Open Journal of Occupational Therapy
acute care
education
occupational therapy
simulation
author_facet Debra M. Gibbs
Mary S. Dietrich
Emmy Dagnan
author_sort Debra M. Gibbs
title Using high fidelity simulation to impact occupational therapy student knowledge, comfort, and confidence in acute care
title_short Using high fidelity simulation to impact occupational therapy student knowledge, comfort, and confidence in acute care
title_full Using high fidelity simulation to impact occupational therapy student knowledge, comfort, and confidence in acute care
title_fullStr Using high fidelity simulation to impact occupational therapy student knowledge, comfort, and confidence in acute care
title_full_unstemmed Using high fidelity simulation to impact occupational therapy student knowledge, comfort, and confidence in acute care
title_sort using high fidelity simulation to impact occupational therapy student knowledge, comfort, and confidence in acute care
publisher Western Michigan University
series Open Journal of Occupational Therapy
issn 2168-6408
2168-6408
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Background: As the demand for occupational and physical therapists in acute care settings is increasing, students are reporting a need for increased educational preparation to handle the complexities they may face in this setting. This pretest/posttest study examines the impact of an inter-professional high fidelity simulation experience on perceived levels of knowledge, comfort, and confidence among occupational therapy doctorate students when handling an acutely ill patient in an ICU setting. Methods: Two cohorts of occupational therapy students participated in an inter-professional acute care scenario with high fidelity simulation mannequins (Cohort 1, n = 19; Cohort 2, n = 27). Before and after the simulation, the students rated their perceived level of knowledge, comfort, and confidence with handling acutely ill patients. Results: A two-tailed Wilcoxin Signed-Ranks indicated that posttest ranks were statistically significantly higher than pretest ranks with α = .05 indicating improvement in students’ perceived levels of knowledge, comfort, and confidence after participating in an acute care simulation. Conclusion: High fidelity simulation can positively impact students’ perceptions of their knowledge, comfort, and confidence in handling acutely ill patients.
topic acute care
education
occupational therapy
simulation
url http://dx.doi.org/10.15453/2168-6408.1225
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