Litcius/Paper detail

Undergraduate nursing students’ knowledge, attitudes and self‐efficacy regarding palliative care in China: A descriptive correlational study

Yinghua Zhou, Qiao Li, Wei Zhang

2020Nursing Open85 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Aim: To describe nursing students' knowledge, attitudes and self-efficacy about palliative care and to examine the associations between these variables in China. Design: A descriptive correlational study. Methods: = 187) at the end of third year of education from a university were surveyed. Measurements included the Chinese versions of the Palliative Care Quiz for Nursing, the Death Attitude Profile-Revised, the Frommelt Attitude Toward Care of the Dying Scale and the Palliative Care Self-Efficacy Scale. Descriptive and correlational analyses were performed. Results: Although most nursing students had favourable attitudes towards death and caring for the dying, students had low level of knowledge and self-efficacy regarding palliative care, suggesting the need for integrating palliative care education into nursing curriculum in China. Moreover, special attention should be paid to psychosocial and spiritual care teaching and preparing students to psychologically deal with the challenges in the process of patient's dying.

Topics & Concepts

Palliative careNursingPsychosocialCurriculumDescriptive researchScale (ratio)Self-efficacyPsychologyNurse educationDescriptive statisticsChinaMedicineMedical educationFamily medicinePedagogySocial psychologySociologyPsychiatryLawQuantum mechanicsPhysicsSocial sciencePolitical scienceMathematicsStatisticsPalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesPalliative and Oncologic CarePatient Dignity and Privacy