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AimTo explore the experiences and needs of postgraduate nursing students within the Nigerian context.DesignThis qualitative study was conducted using a descriptive phenomenological approach.MethodData were collected between February and April 2022 using a purposive sampling method and telephone semi‐structured interviews. Colaizzi's method of Qualitative data Analysis was utilized. Twenty‐two Nigerian postgraduate nursing students were interviewed.ResultsThree themes emerged: challenges of Nigerian postgraduate students before the pandemic, the impact of the pandemic on postgraduate education, and innovations to improve postgraduate education in Nigeria. The challenges include the burden of physical lectures, lack of infrastructure, and poor mentorship of postgraduate nursing students. The impact of the pandemic on postgraduate education includes abrupt disruption of the academic program, a prolonged academic calendar, and a communication gap between students and their research supervisors. Innovations to improve postgraduate nursing education in Nigeria also include adoption and sustainability of e‐learning, upgrading post‐basic to postgraduate nursing programmes, proper structuring of postgraduate nursing education, commencement of postgraduate nursing programmes in more universities and provision of financial aid for students. Our primary finding is that funding, mentorship and infrastructure were issues peculiar to all the respondents.ConclusionThis study concludes that efforts should be made to maintain a seamless educational program by ensuring an uninterrupted flow of learning through virtual means, thereby enhancing effective teaching and learning.ImplicationsGraduate nursing studies is one of the suggested solutions in the WHO strategic direction for nursing and midwifery globally to achieve Universal Health Coverage . The reason is that nurses can practice with more and better skills in any work setting, thus improving the quality of health care services. Our study provides insights into the experiences of postgraduate students and how these could discourage other nurses who might have thought about furthering their studies. Efforts should be made to provide all the support that these students need, using evidence from this study and similar studies to ensure they have a good learning experience and others can be motivated to learn at the graduate level as well. This will increase the proportion of nurses and midwives honed with better skills to provide more standard quality services that will improve patient care outcomes.
AimTo explore the experiences and needs of postgraduate nursing students within the Nigerian context.DesignThis qualitative study was conducted using a descriptive phenomenological approach.MethodData were collected between February and April 2022 using a purposive sampling method and telephone semi‐structured interviews. Colaizzi's method of Qualitative data Analysis was utilized. Twenty‐two Nigerian postgraduate nursing students were interviewed.ResultsThree themes emerged: challenges of Nigerian postgraduate students before the pandemic, the impact of the pandemic on postgraduate education, and innovations to improve postgraduate education in Nigeria. The challenges include the burden of physical lectures, lack of infrastructure, and poor mentorship of postgraduate nursing students. The impact of the pandemic on postgraduate education includes abrupt disruption of the academic program, a prolonged academic calendar, and a communication gap between students and their research supervisors. Innovations to improve postgraduate nursing education in Nigeria also include adoption and sustainability of e‐learning, upgrading post‐basic to postgraduate nursing programmes, proper structuring of postgraduate nursing education, commencement of postgraduate nursing programmes in more universities and provision of financial aid for students. Our primary finding is that funding, mentorship and infrastructure were issues peculiar to all the respondents.ConclusionThis study concludes that efforts should be made to maintain a seamless educational program by ensuring an uninterrupted flow of learning through virtual means, thereby enhancing effective teaching and learning.ImplicationsGraduate nursing studies is one of the suggested solutions in the WHO strategic direction for nursing and midwifery globally to achieve Universal Health Coverage . The reason is that nurses can practice with more and better skills in any work setting, thus improving the quality of health care services. Our study provides insights into the experiences of postgraduate students and how these could discourage other nurses who might have thought about furthering their studies. Efforts should be made to provide all the support that these students need, using evidence from this study and similar studies to ensure they have a good learning experience and others can be motivated to learn at the graduate level as well. This will increase the proportion of nurses and midwives honed with better skills to provide more standard quality services that will improve patient care outcomes.
Aim: To investigate nursing students’ perceptions of their clinical training at a selected university teaching hospital in Nigeria. Method: This was a descriptive cross-sectional design. A simple random sampling technique was used to select 198 nursing students at Babcock University in Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State, Nigeria. An interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to collect data from the respondents. The collected data were analyzed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS Version 25) and presented in tables and charts. Results: This study reveals that 73.23% of the respondents had high knowledge of clinical nursing training, and 78.8% of the respondents had a good perception of clinical nursing training. Furthermore, respondents often complied with clinical posting (mean = 3.35, STD = 0.768), and the study shows that factors relating to clinical supervision and the support accessible during clinical placement influence nursing students’ compliance with clinical nursing practice (mean = 4.06, STD = 1.031). Conclusion: The findings from the study conclude that the perception of nursing students towards clinical nursing training was positive, though some factors affected compliance with clinical nursing practice. Hence, the study recommends the implementation of preclinical orientation, explicit dissemination, and clarification of clinical learning objectives to enhance compliance rates among students during their clinical placements.
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