Impact of bachelor of science in nursing curriculum implementation on student`s attitudes towards the nursing profession in Kenyan universities
Abstract
Attitude toward nursing has been linked to students’ decisions to enter nurse training and
their decision to continue or withdraw from the nursing profession. Nursing education
and training plays an important role in the production of well-trained nurse with the right
attitude. Student nurses undergo various experiences during their training. These include
both curriculum stipulated and extracurricular activities. Nurse training should shape and
strengthen the students’ positive attitude towards nursing which in turn contribute to
improved nursing care. Certain studies have indicated that a great number of Bachelor of
Science in Nursing (BScN) graduates do not want to practice the actual nursing (hands on
practice). This is a great concern because a lot of efforts and resources go along with their
training. This study aimed at analyzing the attitudes of nursing students at the beginning
and at the end of their training in order to determine the impact of the nurse training
curriculum implementation on attitudes towards the nursing profession in order to
recommend improvement.
Both qualitative and quantitative data was collected through analytical Cross-sectional
study design. The main study sites were Kenyan Nurse training public universities. A
random sampling was done to get 162 nurse students as the respondents. 71.6% of these
were first years while the remaining 28.4% were final/fourth year BScN students. Data
was also collected from three key informants. From the student respondents, six focus
groups discussions were conducted. The study instruments comprised of structured
questionnaire, attitude scales, focus group discussion guides and key informant
interviews.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Collections
- Faculty of Health Sciences (FHS) [4302]
- Theses & Dissertations [241]