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Journal of Nursing & Care | ISSN: 2167-1168 | Volume 7

3

rd

World Congress on

May 16-17, 2018 | Montreal, Canada

Nursing Education, Practice & Research

Clinical mentoring, motivation, and empowerment of baccalaureate nursing students in a Nigerian

university: Amixed method study

Mildred E John, Patience E Samson-Akpan

and

Mary A Mgbekem

University of Calabar, Nigeria

M

entoring plays a key role in clinical placement for learning experiences in nursing education. Both faculty- and hospital-

based mentors are important during students' clinical placements. This study explored and described the perception

and clinical mentoring experiences of Baccalaureate nursing students of the University of Calabar Nigeria, in relation

to enhancement of attitudes and competencies. The study utilized mixed method design (concurrent triangulation). Sixty

students from Level 300 to 500 of the program on clinical placement were purposively recruited. Ethical approval was obtained

from the State Health Research Ethics Committee. Focus group discussion and recorded diary (for 4 weeks) were used to

explore the perception and mentoring experiences of nursing students. Elicited data were recorded on audio-tapes and field

notes, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed through Atlas-ti 7.0. Participants also completed structured questionnaire to verify

qualitative data and obtain additional information on benefits and effects of clinical mentoring. Quantitative data were analyzed

using SPSS 18.0. Participants reported that clinical mentoring, especially by faculty-based mentors, empowers students to

apply theoretical knowledge in practice (93.3%), strengthens professional competence (86.7%); enhances positive attitudes

(86.7%); builds confidence (81.7%); and improves clinical efficiency (78.3%). Reported benefits significantly correlated with

level of training (p=0.01). Emerging themes were "Enhanced communication"; "Inspiration through mutually defined goals";

"Commitment to the process"; "Motivation through feedback". Results however revealed that hospital-based mentors were

too busy to provide adequate mentoring to students. Clinical mentoring is beneficial, and hospital-based strategies should be

implemented to enhance mentoring by nurse clinicians.

Biography

Mildred E John is a Professor of Nursing with over thirty years’ experience in teaching nurses. She has acquired knowledge, skills and disposition for capacity

building and mentoring. She has served as the Head of Department, Dean of Faculty and Member of the Board of the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria.

She is the current President of the Association of University Nursing programs in Nigeria. She has 60 publications in reputed journals.

miljohn2k@yahoo.com

Mildred E John et al., J Nurs Care 2018, Volume 7

DOI: 10.4172/2167-1168-C3-070