Faculty, Students Publish Article on Caring for Transgender Patients

Faculty, Students Publish Article on Caring for Transgender Patients

Faculty, students and alumni published "Role-play simulation to teach nursing students how to provide culturally sensitive care to transgender patients" in Nurse Education in Practice.

jacquelyn mcmillian-bohlerkimberlee grieramie kochAmie Koch, assistant professor, Miranda Ritz, MSN student, Anthony Morrow, ABSN'21, Kimberlee Grier, PhD student, (pictured) and Jacqui McMillian-Bohler, assistant professor, published "Role-play simulation to teach nursing students how to provide culturally sensitive care to transgender patients" in Nurse Education in Practice. The manuscript teaches nursing students how to provide culturally sensitive care to transgender patients (and their loved ones).

Abstract

Objective

Increase student knowledge and comfort with caring for a transgender individual and confronting colleagues when exhibiting poor cultural intelligence.

Background

Transgender patients often experience health care inequities, including heteronormative microaggressions in communication and policies. Simulation has been a successful means of providing students with the education, tools, and experience necessary to combat systemic injustice in health care. Simulation is an interactive pedagogy that allows nursing students to practice assessment, patient care, and difficult conversations in a controlled, risk-free environment.

Design/ Methods

Prelicensure nursing students role-played a simulation created as an interactive learning strategy to promote culturally sensitive assessment of a transgender patient and their caregiver, including assessing for pronouns and providing patient-centered care. The simulation included preforming a difficult conversation between nurses to cultivate an environment of being an upstander. The simulation demonstrated holistic methods of assessing and supporting unique patient needs for the patient who is transgender.

Results

Nursing students reported they felt that their comfort with advocacy and ability to communicate with transgender patients, as well as with their families, and health care team members was enhanced after completing the simulation.

Conclusion

Simulation has the ability to reduce discomfort and discrimination in health care for transgender patients by equipping students with culturally sensitive and inclusive communication tools and providing them with risk-free environment where they can learn to provide care for this vulnerable population in preparation for successful future encounters.

Citation

Koch, A., Ritz, M., Morrow, A., Grier, K., & McMillian-Bohler, J. M. (2021). Role-play simulation to teach nursing students how to provide culturally sensitive care to transgender patients. Nurse education in practice, 54, 103123. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nepr.2021.103123

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