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Mask-Ed (KRS Simulation) an approach to deliver intimate care for neophyte nursing students: The creator's experience

journal contribution
posted on 2021-06-21, 22:55 authored by Kerry Reid-SearlKerry Reid-Searl
Nurses deliver intimate care to patients in a variety of ways, especially when attending to showering, bathing, toileting and managing chronic or surgical wounds located in body regions such as the genitalia or breasts. Neophyte undergraduate nursing students can experience fear and anxiety at the thought of carrying out this level of care; hence, there is a need for preparation prior to undertaking clinical placements when students encounter real patients. The preparation should begin in the laboratory context of their tertiary educational settings. Traditionally, task trainers and manikins have been used to demonstrate and practise this care in such environments. However, the realism of experiencing true human responses, by both the patient and student, can be lost through these modalities. In recent years, a simulation approach, Mask-Ed, has enabled intimate care to be taught to students in a university setting in Australia where the laboratory context provides a safety net. Mask-Ed involves the informed educator wearing highly realistic silicone props that include torsos, faces and hands. Having donned the props, the educator then transforms into another person. The newly created person has a backstory designed to enable the educator to become a platform for teaching and to coach students through the clinical experience. The following discussion explains the background to Mask-Ed and the underlying framework that is used to implement the technique to teach intimate care. Mask-Ed is considered one of the most realistic approaches to simulation and is used in healthcare facilities and tertiary educational institutions globally.

History

Volume

29

Issue

12

Start Page

S8

End Page

S10

Number of Pages

3

eISSN

2052-2819

ISSN

0966-0461

Location

England

Publisher

M A Healthcare

Language

eng

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2020-06-01

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Print

Journal

British Journal of Nursing

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