Is history taking a dying skill? An exploration using a simulated learning environment

History taking is a vital component of patient assessment. Nurses need sound interviewing skills to identify care priorities. Verbal and non-verbal cues provide triggers to follow-up with appropriate questions during health assessment for development of appropriate care plans. This skill, however, i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nurse education in practice 2011-07, Vol.11 (4), p.234-238
Hauptverfasser: McKenna, Lisa, Innes, Kelli, French, Jill, Streitberg, Sharyn, Gilmour, Carole
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container_end_page 238
container_issue 4
container_start_page 234
container_title Nurse education in practice
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creator McKenna, Lisa
Innes, Kelli
French, Jill
Streitberg, Sharyn
Gilmour, Carole
description History taking is a vital component of patient assessment. Nurses need sound interviewing skills to identify care priorities. Verbal and non-verbal cues provide triggers to follow-up with appropriate questions during health assessment for development of appropriate care plans. This skill, however, is a difficult one for students to learn and develop. This paper reports on a study that explored the value of video-recording, facilitated review and debriefing following a simulated patient experience to enhance final year nursing students’ history taking and assessment skills. Scenarios, from commonly encountered situations, with imbedded cues were developed. Actors were employed as simulated patients from whom students took histories while being videotaped. Video-recordings were then reviewed by each student with a lecturer to highlight missed cues or areas where questioning could be developed. These were later analysed to explore cue identification. Finally, a focus group was conducted with participants to elicit feedback on the experience. Findings suggested that it was a valuable exercise. Students lacked prior appreciation for many aspects, such as lifestyle, on planning care. Some reported never having had opportunity during clinical placement to take a full history. Analysis of recordings identified commonly missed social cues and failure to fully explore emerging data.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.nepr.2010.11.009
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subjects Appreciation
Assessment
Care plans
Clinical placements
Cues
Curricula
Data Analysis
Debriefing
Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate - methods
Educational Environment
Evaluation
Feedback
Focus Groups
History taking
Humans
Interviews
Laboratories
Learning
Learning environment
Medical History Taking
Nurses
Nursing
Nursing education
Nursing student
Patient assessment
Patient satisfaction
Physical Examinations
Professional identity
Qualitative research
Recording
Simulated learning
Skills
Standardized patients
Students
Verbal communication
Video-recording
title Is history taking a dying skill? An exploration using a simulated learning environment
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