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The most fundamental principle of any healthcare service is "First, do no harm." No one should be harmed in healthcare services. Falls are the most frequently reported and preventable incident among all safety incidents in the hospital environment. However, falls are the most frequently reported incident among all safety incidents. Patient falls are the most common adverse events in hospitals. Patient falls in hospitals cause physiological and psychological harm to patients, affect the timeliness, effectiveness, and efficiency of care, and lead to increases in hospital costs and length of stay. Therefore, preventing falls, which have serious consequences, is of vital importance in terms of patient safety and healthcare quality. Nurses are a group that can sensitively identify and manage issues related to patient safety. Therefore, it is important to identify and reduce the underlying risk factors for falls in patients and to provide appropriate nursing interventions to prevent secondary injuries in patients who have fallen.
Simulation is an important part of nursing education because it improves patient care and ensures patient safety. Simulation-based learning provides students with realistic clinical situations, allowing them to practice clinical skills in a safe environment. This enables students to develop their clinical skills, communication, decision-making, and self-efficacy in a risk-free, safe, and structured environment, representing a contemporary teaching approach.
Teaching safe patient care during nursing students' education is one of the most fundamental elements of nursing education. Inadequate nursing knowledge and attitudes increase the risk of falls among patients receiving care. Students with insufficient clinical experience are at high risk of making undesirable errors in patient care. It is important to increase nursing students' knowledge and attitudes regarding falls during their education.
The standard patient and web-based simulation application offers the closest experience to real clinical situations, providing students with significant potential to become aware of falls they may encounter in practice and prevent potential errors. The increasing importance given to patient safety due to the rising number of fall cases supports the necessity of this research. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of standard patient and web-based simulation methods on nursing students' knowledge and attitudes regarding falls.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Group 1 Group trained with a standard patient in the simulation lab | Experimental |
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| Group 2 The group is receiving web-based simulation training in a laboratory setting. | Experimental |
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| Group 3 Classical classroom education group. | No Intervention |
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standardized patient | Other | The group receiving training with standard patients in a simulation laboratory environment. |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Planned Mean Change in Total Knowledge Score on the Fall Prevention Knowledge Test (0-28) | Planned Mean Change in Total Knowledge Score on the Fall Prevention Knowledge Test (0-28) Total knowledge score will be measured using the Fall Prevention Knowledge Test among nursing students. Change from baseline will be assessed. | From enrollment to the 8th week of the intervention |
| Planned Mean Change in Attitude Score on the Nurses' Attitudes Toward Fall Prevention Scale | Planned Mean Change in Attitude Score on the Nurses' Attitudes Toward Fall Prevention Scale Mean attitude score will be measured using the Nurses' Attitudes Toward Fall Prevention Scale among nursing students. Change from baseline will be assessed. | From enrollment to 8 weeks after intervention |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Planned Mean Change in Total Knowledge Score on the Patient Fall Prevention Knowledge Test | The change in the total knowledge scores of nursing students will be measured using the Patient Fall Prevention Knowledge Test. Change from baseline will be assessed. | Immediately after the intervention |
| Planned Mean Change in Average Attitude Score on the Nurses' Attitudes Towards Fall Prevention Scale |
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Inclusion Criteria:Students were included in the study if they were:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Role | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ESRA ERTUĞRUL | Contact | +9005071053241 | esraertugrul3232@gmail.com |
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| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adnan Menderes University | Aydin | Turkey (Türkiye) |
This study does not plan to share raw data at the individual level. However, to promote transparency of research findings, summary data (demographic characteristics, pretest and posttest scores, group comparisons, and analysis results) that do not include participant identification will be shared with researchers upon request. No personal identifying information (name, contact information, institutional information, etc.) will be shared.
August 2026-December 2026
Access to data will be available only after a written request from the researcher and a review by the research team for scientific relevance. Access will only be provided by securely transmitting designated datasets via email; no sharing will be made via any open-access repository or online platform.
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| web-based simulation | Other | Group receiving training through web-based simulation in a laboratory environment. |
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The change in the average attitude scores of nursing students will be measured using the Nurses' Attitudes Towards Fall Prevention Scale. Change from baseline will be assessed. |
| Immediately after the intervention |
| Planned Mean Change in Student Satisfaction Score Regarding the Simulation Experience | The change in the average satisfaction score of nursing students in the experimental group will be measured using the Student Satisfaction Scale. Change from baseline will be assessed. | Immediately after the intervention |
| Planned Mean Change in Learning Self-Confidence Score Regarding the Simulation Experience | The average learning self-confidence score of nursing students in the experimental group will be measured using the Learning Confidence Scale. Change from baseline will be assessed. | Immediately after the intervention |