Abstract
Introduction: Preparing nursing students for their role as future registered nurses is an essential and complex endeavor. It is a responsibility that is shared between academic and clinical health care organizations. Arguably, the prevailing economic climate places additional pressures on the fiscal and manpower aspects of health care management. Maintaining a quality practice learning environment for students against this backdrop has become increasingly challenging. Indeed, students themselves have raised these concerns. The authors sought to explore these concerns further with the students, and this article will present the qualitative findings of a study exploring final-year students' perceptions of their readiness for practice in a school of nursing in the Republic of Ireland.
Methods: Two open-ended questions were included on a quantitative survey, which sought to ascertain students' self-reported level of readiness for oral medication administration. A convenience sample of 24 final-year students undertaking a 4-year BSc (honors) in general nursing program was involved. Content analysis was employed to explore and elicit the key components of participants' written responses to the open-ended questions.
Results: Participants highlighted the constraints that they have witnessed in some practice areas, the consequent impact on the availability of particular learning opportunities, and their level of preparedness for practice. Three key areas of concern emerged including medication management, patient caseload management, and communication. A recurring issue centered on the delegation of the more fundamental nursing tasks to students by qualified nurses, to the detriment of students' experience of the more complex aspects of holistic patient care. This proved quite exasperating for these participants.
Conclusion: This study demonstrates that final-year undergraduate nursing students in a school in the Republic of Ireland are concerned about their readiness for practice. Specific areas of concern for students relate to their capacity to develop competence for registered practice. These findings provide both a timely reminder and opportunity for those charged with the responsibility of preparing nurses for registration, in both clinical and academic settings, to raise awareness of factors that can impact on the student experience and learning in practice. They highlight the importance of a collaborative approach to addressing the issues that emerged, if competence and patient safety are to be safeguarded and maintained in the future.