Abstract

Understanding the learning needs of students is a vital step in planning the delivery of effective education. Evaluating the impact of such interventions is not always easy and many methods rely on self-reported behaviour or simple changes in knowledge--whose relationship to action is not always clear. Using conjoint analysis, within the theoretical framework of social judgement theory, this study illustrates a novel means of examining nurses' use of clinical information when diagnosing hypovolemic shock in a series of simulated cases presented via computer. The study examines changes in information usage before and after a traditional lecture. The results show that nurses' information use is not linear and the utility for decision judgement derived from clinical information is not distributed equally. The study also suggests that some clinical information (for example, the Glasgow Coma Score) is not well understood and incorporated into clinical judgement. The study has implications for those designing and evaluating educational interventions and those studying information use, clinical judgement and decision making.

Full Text
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