Recognition of Trauma Informed Care Responses in Forensic Nurses
Learning constructs and pedagogy
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.29173/jafn677Keywords:
trauma informed care, TIC, Forensic Nurse Education, Bloom's Taxonomy, ECHO Method, Simulators v Simulations, Moral conflict in new learningAbstract
Trauma is universal, affecting health and behavioral choices. Trauma Informed Care (TIC) principles guide healthcare providers to avoid re-traumatization. States now mandate Trauma Informed Care (TIC) education. When implemented consistently, TIC benefits all. Adequate information integrating TIC principles in forensic nurse education exists. However, the application of TIC principles in forensic nurse practices remains elusive to measurement. The study's purpose is to explore forensic nurse knowledge before and following basic TIC interventional education, and recognition of TIC responses necessary to promote changes in behavior. The design is pre-, educational intervention, post-, and post-post survey that measures change in TIC intervention recognition. The analysis is a descriptive, correlational study to discover learning trends in practicing forensic nurses, determining the validity and reliability of the survey questions using an item response theory (IRT) model. Nineteen forensic nurses participated in the pre-test, intervention, post-, and/or post-post-test. The results revealed that nurses with >3 years’ and <10 years’ experience in nursing and forensic nursing are more likely to recognize TIC learning in a variety of situations. The authors summarize that moral conflict may influence choice in answers, reflecting a lack of recognition of TIC.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
Categories
License
Copyright (c) 2023 Dr., Dr., Dr., Dr.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.