Aim: The aim of this review was to uncover what motivates preregistration nursing students to speak up for
patient safety during work integrated learning (WIL) and to develop an evidence-based safety motivation
framework for use by educators, clinicians, and preregistration nursing students.
Design: This study used an integrative literature review design guided by Whittemore and Knafl's methodological
framework.
Data sources: Five research databases, CINAHL, MEDLINE, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science, were searched
for relevant peer reviewed research literature published in English between January 2011 and January 2024. The
use of MeSH terms “undergraduate nursing student,” or “preregistration nursing student” and “speaking up,”
“patient safety,” and “motivation,” resulted in 489 search returns. Following application of filters and inclusion
criteria fifty-four (n = 54) studies were identified as being relevant to the research aim.
Review methods: The fifty-four (n = 54) research studies were reviewed using the JBI Critical Appraisal tool
relevant to the study methodology. The JBI critical appraisal tools are checklists used to determine research
quality, validity, results, and meaning. Following appraisal, 27 studies were included in the integrative literature
review.
Results: Authentic learning, view of self as a nurse, and positive work integrated learning experiences were found
to be the primary motivators for preregistration nursing students to speak up for patient safety during work
integrated learning. These three motivators provided the foundation for an evidence-based framework, underpinned by self-determination theory, that can be used to enhance preregistration nursing students' motivation to
speak up for patient safety.
Conclusions: The integrative review design enabled the development of the evidence-based Safety Motivation
Framework to support preregistration nursing students' during work integrated learning however missing from
the literature was information about the lived experience of this group of students when speaking up for patient
safety.