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Upgrading rural Japanese nurses’ respiratory rehabilitation skills through videoconferencing

We examined the effect of distance learning on nurses’ clinical skills in a rural Japanese hospital. The subject matter was respiratory rehabilitation. After one face-to-face session, two 30min sessions were delivered by videoconferencing to staff nurses working in a 100–bed rural hospital 250 miles...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of telemedicine and telecare 2000-01, Vol.6 (2_suppl), p.69-71
Main Authors: Sawada, I, Sugiyama, A, Ishikawa, A, Ohyanagi, T, Saeki, K, Izumi, H, Kawase, S, Matsukura, K
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:We examined the effect of distance learning on nurses’ clinical skills in a rural Japanese hospital. The subject matter was respiratory rehabilitation. After one face-to-face session, two 30min sessions were delivered by videoconferencing to staff nurses working in a 100–bed rural hospital 250 miles (400 km) from Sapporo Medical University. A self-rating questionnaire was distributed before and after the sessions. Responses were collected from 15 out of 32 nurses participating in the face-to-face session (47%). Before the first videoconferencing session, ‘always use’ and ‘sometime use’ the new skills were rated by 67% of nurses, but after the second videoconferencing session ‘always use’ and ‘sometimes use’ were rated by 73% and ‘never use’ at 0%. This implies that there was increased use of new skills after the second session, although the difference was not significant. The nurses’ opinions about the effectiveness for patients increased from 8% to 27% after the second session, which was significant. The pilot project indicated the usefulness of distance learning for upgrading nurses’ clinical practice in one rural Japanese hospital and suggested ways in which videoconferencing can be used in future.
ISSN:1357-633X
1758-1109
DOI:10.1258/1357633001935653