Structures, processes and outcomes of specialist critical care nurse education: An integrative review

Objectives: The objective of this study was to review and synthesise international literature to reveal the contemporary structures, processes, and outcomes of critical care nurse (CCN) education. Method: An integrative review on specialist critical care education was guided by Whittemore and Knafl&...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gullick, J., Lin, F., Massey, D., Wilson, L., Greenwood, M., Skylas, K., Woodard, M., Tembo, A., Mitchell, M., Gill, Fenella
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier Inc 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74027
_version_ 1848763160663687168
author Gullick, J.
Lin, F.
Massey, D.
Wilson, L.
Greenwood, M.
Skylas, K.
Woodard, M.
Tembo, A.
Mitchell, M.
Gill, Fenella
author_facet Gullick, J.
Lin, F.
Massey, D.
Wilson, L.
Greenwood, M.
Skylas, K.
Woodard, M.
Tembo, A.
Mitchell, M.
Gill, Fenella
author_sort Gullick, J.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objectives: The objective of this study was to review and synthesise international literature to reveal the contemporary structures, processes, and outcomes of critical care nurse (CCN) education. Method: An integrative review on specialist critical care education was guided by Whittemore and Knafl's integrative review steps: problem identification; literature search; and data evaluation, analysis, and presentation. Donabedian's Quality Framework (Structure-Process-Outcome) provided a useful analytical lens and structure for the reporting of findings. Results: (1) Structures for CCN education incorporated transition-to-practice and ongoing education programs typically offered by hospitals and health services and university-level graduate certificate, diploma, and masters programs. Structural expectations included a standard core curriculum, clinically credible academic staff, and courses compliant with a higher education framework. Published workforce standards and policies were important structures for the practice learning environment. (2) Processes included incremental exposure to increasing patient acuity; consistent and appropriately supported and competent hospital-based preceptors/assessors; courses delivered with a flexible, modular approach; curricula that support nontechnical skills and patient- and family-centred care; stakeholder engagement between the education provider and the clinical setting to guide course planning, evaluation and revalidation; and evidence-based measurement of clinical capabilities/competence. (3) Outcomes included articulation of the scope and levels of graduate attributes and professional activities associated with each level. The role of higher degree research programs for knowledge creation and critical care academic leadership was noted. Conclusions: Provision of high-quality critical care education is multifaceted and complex. These findings provide information for healthcare organisations and education providers. This may enable best practice structures and processes for critical care specialist training that meets the needs of industry and safely supports developing CCN expertise. There is an acknowledged tension between the expectations of governing bodies for policies, standards, and position statements to enhance quality and reduce care variance and the availability of high-quality evidence to underpin these across international contexts.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T10:59:03Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-74027
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:59:03Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Elsevier Inc
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-740272020-01-06T08:23:44Z Structures, processes and outcomes of specialist critical care nurse education: An integrative review Gullick, J. Lin, F. Massey, D. Wilson, L. Greenwood, M. Skylas, K. Woodard, M. Tembo, A. Mitchell, M. Gill, Fenella Objectives: The objective of this study was to review and synthesise international literature to reveal the contemporary structures, processes, and outcomes of critical care nurse (CCN) education. Method: An integrative review on specialist critical care education was guided by Whittemore and Knafl's integrative review steps: problem identification; literature search; and data evaluation, analysis, and presentation. Donabedian's Quality Framework (Structure-Process-Outcome) provided a useful analytical lens and structure for the reporting of findings. Results: (1) Structures for CCN education incorporated transition-to-practice and ongoing education programs typically offered by hospitals and health services and university-level graduate certificate, diploma, and masters programs. Structural expectations included a standard core curriculum, clinically credible academic staff, and courses compliant with a higher education framework. Published workforce standards and policies were important structures for the practice learning environment. (2) Processes included incremental exposure to increasing patient acuity; consistent and appropriately supported and competent hospital-based preceptors/assessors; courses delivered with a flexible, modular approach; curricula that support nontechnical skills and patient- and family-centred care; stakeholder engagement between the education provider and the clinical setting to guide course planning, evaluation and revalidation; and evidence-based measurement of clinical capabilities/competence. (3) Outcomes included articulation of the scope and levels of graduate attributes and professional activities associated with each level. The role of higher degree research programs for knowledge creation and critical care academic leadership was noted. Conclusions: Provision of high-quality critical care education is multifaceted and complex. These findings provide information for healthcare organisations and education providers. This may enable best practice structures and processes for critical care specialist training that meets the needs of industry and safely supports developing CCN expertise. There is an acknowledged tension between the expectations of governing bodies for policies, standards, and position statements to enhance quality and reduce care variance and the availability of high-quality evidence to underpin these across international contexts. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74027 10.1016/j.aucc.2018.09.007 Elsevier Inc fulltext
spellingShingle Gullick, J.
Lin, F.
Massey, D.
Wilson, L.
Greenwood, M.
Skylas, K.
Woodard, M.
Tembo, A.
Mitchell, M.
Gill, Fenella
Structures, processes and outcomes of specialist critical care nurse education: An integrative review
title Structures, processes and outcomes of specialist critical care nurse education: An integrative review
title_full Structures, processes and outcomes of specialist critical care nurse education: An integrative review
title_fullStr Structures, processes and outcomes of specialist critical care nurse education: An integrative review
title_full_unstemmed Structures, processes and outcomes of specialist critical care nurse education: An integrative review
title_short Structures, processes and outcomes of specialist critical care nurse education: An integrative review
title_sort structures, processes and outcomes of specialist critical care nurse education: an integrative review
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74027