Increasing Resilience in Nursing Students

Friday, April 4, 2014

Teresa Maggard Stephens, PhD, MSN, BSN, RN
School of Nursing, King University, Bristol, TN
Mary E. Gunther, PhD, MSN, BSN, RN
College of Nursing, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN

Background: 

Nursing students face the same developmental challenges as other college students, but also experience unique stressors that contribute to increased risk for negative outcomes. The intimate nature of patient care, the exposure to workplace adversity, death and dying, and the chaotic nature of healthcare can have cumulative negative effects on students’ health and well-being. Increased resilience could prove useful in helping students confidently face challenges and successfully move forward.

Purpose: 

The purpose of this study was to: (1) determine the effectiveness of an educational intervention delivered via Twitter to increase resilience and sense of support, as well as decrease perceived stress, in a sample of adolescent baccalaureate nursing students, and (2) to describe the personal characteristics of this sample of nursing students.

Method/Research Design:

The study was a multisite experimental repeated measures design with a follow-up email survey. Participants were a sample of 70 randomly assigned junior-level baccalaureate nursing students, ages 19-23, at two state supported universities in the southeastern United States.  Both the control and experimental groups completed three measurements (perceived stress, sense of support, and resilience) at three times of measurement. Multilevel modeling was used to examine growth trajectories over time.

Findings: 

Both groups showed a decline in perceived stress, but the control group demonstrated a greater decrease in scores at follow-up. No statistically significant difference was detected between groups in terms of sense of support. The experimental group demonstrated an increase in resilience from pretest to posttest, but declined at follow-up.

Discussion: 

Despite the unexpected findings, results of the email survey indicate the intervention was beneficial to some students. Strengths of the study include the innovative intervention using Twitter, the use of repeated measures, the use of multilevel modeling to analyze longitudinal data, and the first known use of Ahern’s model as a guiding framework.

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