How Prepared Are Medical and Nursing Students to Identify Common Hazards in the Intensive Care Unit?

dc.contributor.author

Clay, Alison S

dc.contributor.author

Chudgar, Saumil M

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Turner, Kathleen M

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Vaughn, Jacqueline

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Knudsen, Nancy W

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Farnan, Jeanne M

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Arora, Vineet M

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Molloy, Margory A

dc.date.accessioned

2022-10-28T19:27:46Z

dc.date.available

2022-10-28T19:27:46Z

dc.date.issued

2017-04

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2022-10-28T19:27:43Z

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Rationale

Care in the hospital is hazardous. Harm in the hospital may prolong hospitalization, increase suffering, result in death, and increase costs of care. Although the interprofessional team is critical to eliminating hazards that may result in adverse events to patients, professional students' formal education may not prepare them adequately for this role.

Objectives

To determine if medical and nursing students can identify hazards of hospitalization that could result in harm to patients and to detect differences between professions in the types of hazards identified.

Methods

Mixed-methods observational study of graduating nursing (n = 51) and medical (n = 93) students who completed two "Room of Horrors" simulations to identify patient safety hazards. Qualitative analysis was used to extract themes from students' written hazard descriptions. Fisher's exact test was used to determine differences in frequency of hazards identified between groups.

Results

Identification of hazards by students was low: 66% did not identify missing personal protective equipment for a patient on contact isolation, and 58% did not identify a medication administration error (medication hanging for a patient with similar name). Interprofessional differences existed in how hazards were identified: medical students noted that restraints were not indicated (73 vs. 2%, P < 0.001), whereas nursing students noted that there was no order for the restraints (58.5 vs. 0%, P < 0.0001). Nursing students discovered more issues with malfunctioning or incorrectly used equipment than medical students. Teams performed better than individuals, especially for hazards in the second simulation that were similar to those in the first: need to replace a central line with erythema (73% teams identified) versus need to replace a peripheral intravenous line (10% individuals, P < 0.0001). Nevertheless, teams of students missed many intensive care unit-specific hazards: 54% failed to identify the presence of pressure ulcers; 85% did not notice high tidal volumes on the ventilator; and 90% did not identify the absence of missing spontaneous awakening/breathing trials and absent stress ulcer prophylaxis.

Conclusions

Graduating nursing and medical students missed several hazards of hospitalization, especially those related to the intensive care unit. Orientation for residents and new nurses should include education on hospitalization hazards. Ideally, this orientation should be interprofessional to allow appreciation for each other's roles and responsibilities.
dc.identifier.issn

2329-6933

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2325-6621

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26112

dc.language

eng

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American Thoracic Society

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Annals of the American Thoracic Society

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10.1513/annalsats.201610-773oc

dc.subject

Humans

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Peptic Ulcer

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Restraint, Physical

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Medication Errors

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Respiration, Artificial

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Hospitalization

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Patient Isolation

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Qualitative Research

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Clinical Competence

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Students, Medical

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Students, Nursing

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Intensive Care Units

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Pressure Ulcer

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Patient Safety

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Personal Protective Equipment

dc.title

How Prepared Are Medical and Nursing Students to Identify Common Hazards in the Intensive Care Unit?

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Clay, Alison S|0000-0003-3191-5345

duke.contributor.orcid

Molloy, Margory A|0000-0003-4820-8137

pubs.begin-page

543

pubs.end-page

549

pubs.issue

4

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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School of Nursing

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Clinical Science Departments

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Anesthesiology

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Anesthesiology, Critical Care Medicine

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Medicine

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Surgery

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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Medicine, Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine

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Medical Education

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

14

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