PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Nurses trained via virtual reality performed better than those trained by inpatient clinical training

This promising preliminary research comes from a new pilot study by an associate professor of Nursing in George Mason University’s College of Public Health

2023-04-13
(Press-News.org)

In search of novel tactics to accommodate a larger student body and fulfill workforce demands, nursing schools are developing new approaches to optimize learning, engage learners, and provide methods to ensure competency in future nursing graduates.

A recent study by Bethany Cieslowski, associate professor of Nursing, and colleagues found that immersive virtual reality (VR) training has been shown to be as effective as inpatient training for students learning to provide care for acute care pediatric patients. The performance of student nurses who underwent immersive virtual reality training was found to be better overall than that of their counterparts who received inpatient clinical training.

“The use of VR continues to grow in clinical nursing practice; however, the existing body of evidence on VR, especially immersive virtual reality, is limited. These preliminary results offer promise and demonstrate the potential of immersive virtual reality in the future of nursing education and preparing the workforce of the future,” said Cieslowski.

The average (mean) scores for students in the immersive VR training group were higher for all performance domains, with particularly notable improvements in the subdomains of infection control, initial assessment, and oxygen therapy compared to the clinic trained group. There were no significant differences between the groups in focused assessment, medication administration, and evaluation. Total performance scores were significantly higher for the VR group.

The mixed-methods without randomization pilot study examined the effectiveness of an immersive VR simulation training program to replace pediatric clinical practice for a convenience sample of junior-level prelicensure nursing students.

“The Development and Pilot Testing of Immersive Virtual Reality Simulation Training for Prelicensure Nursing Students: A Quasi-Experimental Study” was published in Clinical Simulation in Nursing in February 2023. Tanya Haas, assistant professor of nursing; Kyeung Mi Oh, associate professor of nursing; Kathleen Chang, assistant professor of Nursing; and Cheryl Oetjen, interim director of the School of Nursing were also part of the research team.

The Medical Team, Inc. Endowment for Innovations in Nursing Education Fund funded part of the research.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Hallmarks to improving pancreatic cancer therapy identified by UC Irvine researchers

2023-04-13
Irvine, Calif., April 13, 2023 — Scientists from the University of California, Irvine, the University of Michigan and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have made a significant contribution to the field of pancreatic cancer research. Their new study presents several crucial themes in the biology of pancreatic cancer that can serve as hallmarks for pancreatic cancer therapy. These themes include genomic alterations, metabolism, the tumor microenvironment, immunotherapy and innovative clinical trial design. The study appears in the journal Cell. (Link to study: https://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(23)00142-3) Pancreatic ...

Four major Illinois research institutions form a collaboration to improve urban forest drought resilience

2023-04-13
Scientists at four leading Illinois research institutions, three in the Chicago region, are forming a new collaboration to study the effects of drought on urban trees and develop more effective drought response strategies nationwide through a grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The project is being led by researchers at The Morton Arboretum in conjunction with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory, the University of Chicago and the Illinois State Water Survey at the Prairie Research ...

Good news! Only a modest reduction in added sugars consumption is needed to achieve the Healthy People 2030 target

2023-04-13
Ann Arbor, April 13, 2023 – Reducing caloric intake from added sugars is a Leading Health Indicator in Healthy People 2030, a national public health initiative led by the US Department of Health and Human Services that sets data-driven national objectives to improve health and wellbeing over the next decade. Although many Americans consume too much sugar, investigators found that only a modest reduction in added sugars intake is needed to reach a population mean of 11.5% of calories from added sugars by 2030. Prioritizing reducing added sugars intake among people not meeting recommendations could help those most at risk for chronic disease related to added sugars consumption. They report ...

T-cell vaccine for COVID-19 may last longer than current vaccines

T-cell vaccine for COVID-19 may last longer than current vaccines
2023-04-13
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The current COVID-19 vaccines are designed to trigger an antibody response to the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which is vulnerable to mutations that could make the vaccine less effective over time. Focusing on the T-cell instead, Penn State researchers partnered with Evaxion Biotech on a study that was the first to demonstrate the effectiveness of an artificial intelligence-generated vaccine in a live viral challenge model. Such a vaccine may provide long-lasting immunity against future emerging variants and could be used as a model for other seasonal viral diseases ...

Rice U. students engineer socks for on-the-go neuropathy treatment

Rice U. students engineer socks for on-the-go neuropathy treatment
2023-04-13
HOUSTON – (April 13, 2023) – Need a little spring — or buzz — in your step? A wearable electrical-stimulation and vibration-therapy system designed by Rice University engineering students might be just what the doctor ordered for people experiencing foot pain and balance loss due to diabetic neuropathy. Rice engineering students in the StimuSock team — Abby Dowse, Yannie Guo, Andrei Mitrofan, Sarah Park and Kelly Xu — designed a sock with a smart insole that can deliver both transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) and vibration therapy that block pain signals to the brain and ...

UC Davis study finds tweets can amplify, disrupt, unite and divide

2023-04-13
Social media connects people and amplifies different aspects of humanity in good and bad ways. But the effects of social media appear neither universally good nor bad, but rather present an oscillating, dynamic system that can be divisive but also uniting, a new University of California, Davis, study suggests. Department of Communication researchers said their findings both in an observational study and simulation speak to the ongoing debate about social media’s contributions to political polarization, misinformation and echo chambers. To conduct their research, ...

Highlights from the journal CHEST®, April 2023

Highlights from the journal CHEST®, April 2023
2023-04-13
Glenview, Illinois – Published monthly, the journal CHEST® features peer-reviewed, cutting-edge original research in chest medicine: Pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine and related disciplines. Journal topics include asthma, chest infections, COPD, critical care, diffuse lung disease, education and clinical practice, pulmonary vascular disease, sleep, thoracic oncology and the humanities. The April issue of the CHEST journal contains 50 articles, including clinically relevant research, reviews, case series, commentary and more. ...

First-in-Canada clinical RNA sequencing platform may improve rare disease diagnostics in pediatrics

First-in-Canada clinical RNA sequencing platform may improve rare disease diagnostics in pediatrics
2023-04-13
A new clinical RNA sequencing platform at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) is helping to facilitate research into rare genetic conditions and carve a path for Precision Child Health, a movement at SickKids to deliver individualized care for every patient. RNA sequencing provides a different way of looking at the genes, by looking at how the body interprets the genetic code rather than looking directly at the genetic code itself. While DNA-based tests like genome sequencing take a picture of a person’s genetic code, scientists can better understand how the DNA is being read by also looking at RNA, which carries instructions for making ...

Durability of bivalent boosters against Omicron subvariants

2023-04-13
(CHAPEL HILL, N.C., April 13, 2023) New research led by the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health shows that bivalent COVID-19 boosters are still providing effective protection from hospitalization and death, even against the most recent omicron subvariants. Published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), researchers found that the bivalent boosters were 67% effective in preventing hospitalization and death in those who had been previously vaccinated or boosted. Effectiveness waned to 48% after four weeks, 44% after 10 weeks and 38% after 20 weeks. Though ...

Improving the accuracy of near-infrared fluorescence in cardiovascular imaging

Improving the accuracy of near-infrared fluorescence in cardiovascular imaging
2023-04-13
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) or heart diseases are still the leading cause of death globally. Fortunately, doctors are now equipped with more advanced and sophisticated tools that help them diagnose CVDs. A prominent example is intravascular ultrasound (IVUS), which enables cardiologists to obtain images of the inside of blood vessels using a thin ultrasound probe. These images can then be used to assess problems such as the thickening of arteries caused by fat or plaque buildup. While IVUS is undoubtedly a powerful ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Lighting the way: how activated gold reveals drug movement in the body

SwRI-led PUNCH constellation launches

Cells “speed date” to find their neighbors when forming tissues

Food insecurity today, heart disease tomorrow?

Food insecurity and incident cardiovascular disease among Black and White US individuals

Association of diet and waist-to-hip ratio with brain connectivity and memory in aging

Evolution and current challenges of gastrointestinal endoscopy in Nigeria: insights from a nationwide survey

Transgender and gender diverse people less likely to receive follow-up after a mental health hospitalization

Long-lived families show lower risk for peripheral artery disease

Food systems, climate change, and air pollution: Unveiling the interactions and solutions

Tissue engineering offers new hope for spinal cord injury repair

Preclinical study finds earlier ACL reconstruction is associated with lower risk of knee osteoarthritis

Assessing pain, anxiety and other symptoms of nursing home residents unable to speak for themselves

Thirty-three centers join new Bronchiectasis and NTM Care Center Network

Effects of ethanol on the digestive system

KIER unveils blueprint for cost-effective production of eco-friendly green hydrogen

Blind to the burn: Misconceptions about skin cancer risk in the US

Young Australians demand action on mental health, cost of living and education reform: report

First national perception survey of Food is Medicine programs shows strong public support

UNCG professor investigates how symbiotic groups can behave like single organisms with $600,000 in Templeton Foundation funding

Targeted alpha therapy: a breakthrough in treating refractory skin cancer

Transforming thymic carcinoma treatment with a dual approach

Wrong on skin cares: keratinocytes, not fibroblasts, make collagen for healthy skin

Delhi air pollution worse than expected as water vapour skews figures

First radio pulses traced to dead-star binary

New membrane discovery makes possible cleaner lithium extraction

Entwined dwarf stars reveal their location thanks to repeated radio bursts

Landscape scale pesticide pollution detected in the Upper Rhine region, from agricultural lowlands to remote areas

Decoding nanomaterial phase transitions with tiny drums

Two-star system explains unusual astrophysical phenomenon

[Press-News.org] Nurses trained via virtual reality performed better than those trained by inpatient clinical training
This promising preliminary research comes from a new pilot study by an associate professor of Nursing in George Mason University’s College of Public Health