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A meta-synthesis of person-centredness in nursing curricula.

Authors :
O'Donnell, Deirdre
McCormack, Brendan
McCance, Tanya
McIlfatrick, Sonja
Source :
International Practice Development Journal. Sep2020, Vol. 10, p1-22. 22p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Person-centred approaches to practice are synonymous with effective healthcare. It is therefore important that the nursing workforce values, recognises and demonstrates person-centred practice. This has implications for nursing education and how curricula prepare students for personcentred practice. Aim: To conduct a meta-synthesis of person-centredness in nursing curricula. Method: Meta-synthesis. Results: The meta-synthesis included 48 papers. Four themes were identified: • Moving beyond mediocrity (dissatisfaction with current teaching and learning approaches, and a desire to enhance curricula to promote person-centredness) • Me, myself and I (promoting person-centredness in nursing curricula requires all participants in nursing education to have self-knowledge) • The curricular suitcase (nursing curricula have finite capacity so the inclusion of personcentredness is an essential requirement for the career journey) • Learning elevators (it is important to prioritise learning cultures and experiences that help students understand and enact person-centred practice) Conclusion: This study has found that nurse educators aspire to and are committed to the promotion of person-centred practice. Internationally, a range of pedagogies and curricular developments to promote person-centredness have been positively evaluated. However, there is generally a lack of conceptual clarity about the nature of person-centredness and no evidence of a systematic approach to whole-curriculum development that reflects the theoretical principles of person-centred practice. Implications for practice development: • Person-centred practice is a prominent concept in healthcare policy. If the future nursing workforce is to be prepared for person-centred practice then proficiency standards and nursing curricula should consistently reflect this • Nursing curricula need to be developed to encompass a breadth and depth of learning experiences in academic and practice settings, in order to optimise student learning about those issues that matter most to people in need of healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20469292
Volume :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Practice Development Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146335210
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.19043/ipdj.10Suppl2.002