Confronting a patient’s breathing difficulties, clinical junior nurses often do not know how to respond, and fail to give proper evaluation and treatment. Sudden changes in the condition make the clinical nursing novices feel pressured, and even, frustrated.
This study aims at exploring the effectiveness of the high-realistic situational simulation of dyspnea teaching program for pre-clinical and clinical 1st year nurses after graduation.
This study adopts a quasi-experimental repeated measure pre-post-test design study with nonequivalent control group pre- and post-test research design. A total of 135 subjects participated in the research: nurses, post graduate year (NPGY) (
For “cognition, skills, attitude, self-efficacy, teamwork,” NPGY and pre-clinical nurses’ post-tests are better than pre-tests, with statistically significant results. NPGY nurses’ “skills,” “attitude” and “teamwork” learning effectiveness are better than those of the pre-clinical nurses.
The high-realistic situational simulation of dyspnea teaching program can significantly improve the learning effectiveness of NPGY nurses and pre-clinical nurses in the clinical evaluation and treatment of dyspnea.