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1.
Nurse Educ Today ; 138: 106186, 2024 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38555824

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Contemporary midwifery curricula require that student midwives have insight and understanding of global health practice and intercultural sensitivity. The current mobility model excludes large numbers of students from engaging in transnational learning. OBJECTIVES: 1) to evaluate midwifery students' experiences of blended mobility; 2) to investigate if the combination of virtual and physical mobility activities supported development of intercultural sensitivity and soft skills. DESIGN: Multi-centre mixed-methods study. SETTINGS: Four European Higher Education Institutions located in England, Italy, Estonia and The Netherlands. PARTICIPANTS: Sixty-four midwifery students studying in one of the four partner institutions selected as study sites and who participated in the TOTEMM blended mobility scheme took part in the evaluation. METHODS: Data were collected through two online surveys, face-to-face focus groups and learning analytics. Descriptive summary statistical analysis of survey data was undertaken. Focus group discussions were subjected to thematic analysis. Findings from the quantitative survey and qualitative focus groups were merged using a convergent mixed methods approach. Learning Analytics were interpreted as complementary to the above components, to further triangulate the findings. RESULTS: Both virtual and physical components were evaluated positively by students, with high engagement confirmed by learning analytics. A statistically significant increase in the mean of the Total Intercultural Sensitivity Scale score was seen between the pre- and post-mobility surveys, indicating participation in the TOTEMM mobility model was associated with enhanced intercultural sensitivity. Positive effects on confidence, open-mindedness, empathy, interaction and non-judgment were shared by participants. CONCLUSIONS: TOTEMM is an innovative inclusive approach to enable a diverse student group to benefit from transnational learning, including the development of intercultural sensitivity. The TOTEMM blended mobility model has potential for integration into future midwifery curricula and programmes in the four partner settings involved in TOTEMM and utility for the wider European context.


Assuntos
Grupos Focais , Tocologia , Estudantes de Enfermagem , Humanos , Estudantes de Enfermagem/psicologia , Estudantes de Enfermagem/estatística & dados numéricos , Grupos Focais/métodos , Tocologia/educação , Feminino , Inquéritos e Questionários , Bacharelado em Enfermagem/métodos , Competência Cultural/educação , Adulto , Currículo/tendências , Europa (Continente)
2.
Eur J Midwifery ; 3: 17, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33537596

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Midwives have a remarkable influence on various outcomes in healthcare, of which the activities related to the management during the childbirth are emphasised the most. Midwives like all healthcare workers encounter many different stressors in clinical practice, including time pressure, excessive workload, different roles, and emotional issues. The profession of the midwife requires much knowledge, competence, good attitude and self-confidence in order to cope with many different complicated situations and dilemmas. This study has been conducted under the project: 'Increasing midwives' ethical competence: a European educational and practice development project (INEC)'. METHODS: This is a qualitative case study. The current case study involved 7 midwives of the Women's Clinic, East-Tallinn Central Hospital, Estonia; the midwives expressed their willingness and agreed to take part in the activities of the peer group supervisors. The aim of the case study was to find how peer group supervision as a method helps midwives to solve complicated cases and dilemmas, helping them to maintain self-confidence and therefore to manage stress at work more effectively. RESULTS: All the participating midwives shared the opinion that peer group supervision helps midwives to cope with complicated situations and dilemmas more effectively, it empowers professional skills and self-confidence, and so contributes to more effective stress management at work. Also, the midwives expressed hope that this topic would be useful for the professional midwives and to other employees working in the field of healthcare, that encounter complicated cases in their daily work, and so will form an active team of peer group supervision. CONCLUSIONS: Peer group supervision is an efficient method that helps midwives solve complicated cases in the Women's Clinic, East-Tallinn Central Hospital, Estonia.

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