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Volume 4

Journal of Community & Public Health Nursing

Public Health Nursing 2018

September 19-20, 2018

September 19-20, 2018 Singapore

7

th

International Conference on

Public Health and Nursing

Dale M Hilty, J Comm Pub Health Nurs 2018, Volume 4

DOI: 10.4172/2471-9846-C1-003

Two simulated ICU rooms rated by BSN students: When patient cannot speak

Dale M Hilty

Mt. Carmel College of Nursing, USA

I

n the face of sudden illness or injury, admission to an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) may be inevitable. Patients in the ICU often

require mechanical ventilation through an artificial airway which makes verbal communication impossible. The inability

to speak, along with compounding factors that influence level of consciousness, often complicate communication between

the nurse and the patient, contributing to frustration. Perceptions of the ICU experience and caring as reported by patients,

family and nurses are abundant. Few reports of images triggering empathy can be found. No reports or discussions were found

connecting the impact of photographs on nurse caring. None of the references included nursing students in their publications.

Participants were 66 third year and 64 first year BSN undergraduate students. In the simulation center, students visited two

ICU rooms with an artificial machine representing a male patient who was sedated, not moving, wrists restrained, colorful

waveform continuously flowing bedside monitor. Students spend several minutes in each room. Students complete a semantic

differential. Using SPSS 25, a Dependent t-test analysis compared the ICU Room #1 with ICU Room #2 (collage of pictures).

ICU Room #2 had higher means on all comparisons. The 130 participants rating were statistically significant ranging from

p=0.001 to p=0.042. An Independent t-test compared the third year and first year students. There were no significant differences

between the first year (no clinical experience) the third year students (1.5 years of clinical experience) on comparisons of ICU

Room #2 (college of pictures). On adjective comparisons of ICU Room #1, first year students had higher means than third year

students. The 24 significant comparisons ranged from p=0.001 to p=0.034.

Biography

Dale M Hilty, Associate Professor, has received his PhD in Counseling Psychology from Department of Psychology at the Ohio State University. He has published

studies in the areas of psychology, sociology and religion. Between April 2017 and April 2018, his ten research teams published 55 posters at local, state, regional,

national and international nursing conferences.

dhilty@mccn.edu