Abstract

In today's changing health care climate, clinical nurse educators are being challenged to educate nurses with a wide range of experience. This article describes the development and facilitation of a low-fidelity simulation used to educate nurses about identified gaps in standardized care during stroke admissions on a medical-surgical stroke unit at Legacy Emanuel Medical Center. The simulation was developed for use by novice and expert medical-surgical stroke nurses simultaneously. With the use of Bloom's Revised Taxonomy (Anderson et al., 2001), roles within the simulation were tailored to encourage the learning of nurses with varying levels of expertise. Overall, learners appeared to benefit from the class, which included the stroke admission simulation. Mean test scores increased from 55% pretest to 80% posttest. Additionally, 98% of learners found the simulation and lecture moderately helpful or extremely helpful. [J Contin Educ Nurs. 2024;55(3):113-119.].

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