A focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder

Introduction: Negative attitudes exist in practice towards those with a diagnosis of personality disorder. Preregistration training offers the opportunity to address this by developing understanding of the diagnosis, confidence in working with people with the diagnosis and empowering new nurses to c...

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Main Authors: Stacey, G., Baldwin, V., Thompson, B., Aubeeluck, A.
Format: Article
Published: Wiley 2018
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52063/
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author Stacey, G.
Baldwin, V.
Thompson, B.
Aubeeluck, A.
author_facet Stacey, G.
Baldwin, V.
Thompson, B.
Aubeeluck, A.
author_sort Stacey, G.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Introduction: Negative attitudes exist in practice towards those with a diagnosis of personality disorder. Preregistration training offers the opportunity to address this by developing understanding of the diagnosis, confidence in working with people with the diagnosis and empowering new nurses to challenge prevailing attitudes. Attempts to integrate and evaluate specific educational interventions of this nature into pre‐registration nurse education have not been explored elsewhere. Aim: To explore preregistration nurses’ experience of a programme of training focused on personality disorder and their perception of its influence on attitudes, understanding of clients and their experience of practice. Method: A qualitative study using thematic analysis of two focus groups of pre‐registration mental health nursing students. Results: Evidence of positive attitudes and confidence to supportively challenge negative attitudes in practice were found. Students showed a shift away from a focus on changing the perceived ‘difficult’ behaviour of a client towards an understanding of their own emotional responses to the behaviours. Discussion: The Knowledge and Understanding Framework training shows potential for students to change attitudes and develop progressive practice working with people with personality disorder. Implications for Practice: The integration of the Knowledge and Understanding Framework should be considered as part of preregistration training. Further research into the sustained influence of the training post registration is required.
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spelling nottingham-520632020-05-04T19:37:15Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52063/ A focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder Stacey, G. Baldwin, V. Thompson, B. Aubeeluck, A. Introduction: Negative attitudes exist in practice towards those with a diagnosis of personality disorder. Preregistration training offers the opportunity to address this by developing understanding of the diagnosis, confidence in working with people with the diagnosis and empowering new nurses to challenge prevailing attitudes. Attempts to integrate and evaluate specific educational interventions of this nature into pre‐registration nurse education have not been explored elsewhere. Aim: To explore preregistration nurses’ experience of a programme of training focused on personality disorder and their perception of its influence on attitudes, understanding of clients and their experience of practice. Method: A qualitative study using thematic analysis of two focus groups of pre‐registration mental health nursing students. Results: Evidence of positive attitudes and confidence to supportively challenge negative attitudes in practice were found. Students showed a shift away from a focus on changing the perceived ‘difficult’ behaviour of a client towards an understanding of their own emotional responses to the behaviours. Discussion: The Knowledge and Understanding Framework training shows potential for students to change attitudes and develop progressive practice working with people with personality disorder. Implications for Practice: The integration of the Knowledge and Understanding Framework should be considered as part of preregistration training. Further research into the sustained influence of the training post registration is required. Wiley 2018-05-21 Article PeerReviewed Stacey, G., Baldwin, V., Thompson, B. and Aubeeluck, A. (2018) A focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing . ISSN 1365-2850 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jpm.12473 doi:10.1111/jpm.12473 doi:10.1111/jpm.12473
spellingShingle Stacey, G.
Baldwin, V.
Thompson, B.
Aubeeluck, A.
A focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder
title A focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder
title_full A focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder
title_fullStr A focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder
title_full_unstemmed A focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder
title_short A focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder
title_sort focus group study exploring student nurse’s experiences of an educational intervention focused on working with people with a diagnosis of personality disorder
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52063/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52063/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52063/