Clinical Research
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Bilgi Açığını Kapatmak: Hunan Eyaletindeki Hemşirelik Lisans Öğrencileri Arasında Klinik Beslenme Hazırlığının Değerlendirilmesi

Year 2025, Volume: 8 Issue: 2, 41 - 47, 28.08.2025

Abstract

AMAÇ: Hemşirelik öğrencilerinin diyetle ilişkili hastalıkların yönetimindeki klinik beslenme hazırlığını değerlendirmek ve müfredat geliştirmeye temel oluşturabilecek bilgi eksikliklerini belirlemek. Hemşireler hasta eğitiminde ve kronik hastalıkların azaltılmasında önemli bir rol oynadığından bu çok önemlidir.
GEREÇ ve YÖNTEM: Tanımlayıcı kesitsel bir çalışma, kendi kendine uygulanan bir anket kullanılarak yapıldı. Anket, Jinan, Shandong Eyaleti’ndeki büyük bir devlet üniversitesinde üçüncü ve son sınıf lisans hemşirelik öğrencilerinden 258 gönüllü tarafından tamamlandı. Değerlendirme aracı, klinik uygulamayla ilgili temel beslenme prensiplerini değerlendiren 20 çoktan seçmeli sorudan oluşuyordu.
BULGULAR: Katılımcıların elde ettiği ortalama puan 20 üzerinden 10,5±2,45 olup, bu da %52,5’lik sınırda bir geçme oranına karşılık gelmektedir. Öğrencilerin beslenme bilgisi mükemmel (%2,3), iyi (%21,7), yeterli (%48,1) ve zayıf (%27,9) olarak kategorize edildi. Yaş, cinsiyet veya önceki klinik deneyime göre bilgi puanlarında istatistiksel olarak anlamlı farklılıklar bulunmadı (p>0,05).
SONUÇ: Bu kurumdaki hemşirelik öğrencilerinin beslenme bilgisi yetersiz olup, hemşirelik müfredatında beslenme eğitiminin artırılması gerektiğini yansıtmaktadır. Bu bulgular, Çin’deki gelecekteki hemşirelerin beslenme yetkinliğini güçlendirerek diyetle ilişkili hastalıkların yükünü daha iyi ele almaları açısından önemli çıkarımlara sahiptir.

Ethical Statement

Çalışma protokolü, Jinan Belediye Sağlık Meslek Yüksekokulu Kurumsal İnceleme Kurulu tarafından incelendi ve onaylandı (IRB onay no: JM-IRB-2025-047; onay tarihi: 15 Şubat 2025). Tüm prosedürler Helsinki Bildirgesi ve ilgili ulusal düzenlemelere uygun olarak gerçekleştirildi. Katılım gönüllülük esasına dayanıyordu. her öğrenciden yazılı onam alındı ve tüm veriler analizden önce anonimleştirildi.

References

  • 1. Warber JI, Warber JP, Simone KA. Assessment of general nutrition knowledge of nurse practitioners in New England. J Am Diet Assoc. 2000; 100: 368-370.
  • 2. Schaller C, James EL. The nutritional knowledge of Australian nurses. Nurse Educ Today. 2005; 25: 405-412.
  • 3. Fletcher A, Carey E. Knowledge, attitudes and practices in the provision of nutritional care. Br J Nurs. 2011; 20: 615- 316, 8-20.
  • 4. Zaghamir DEF, Ibrahim AM. Efficiency of an intervention study on nursing students' knowledge and practices regarding nutrition and dietary habits. Libyan J Med. 2023; 18: 2281121.
  • 5. Kelly IE, Tessier S, Cahill A, Morris SE, Crumley A, McLaughlin D, et al. Still hungry in hospital: identifying malnutrition in acute hospital admissions. QJM. 2000; 93: 93-98.
  • 6. Nugent R. Chronic diseases in developing countries: health and economic burdens. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2008; 1136: 70-79.
  • 7. Zhai F, Wang H, Du S, He Y, Wang Z, Ge K, et al. Prospective study on nutrition transition in China. Nutr Rev. 2009; 67 Suppl 1: S56-S61.
  • 8. Ghaly P, Iliopoulos J, Ahmad M. The role of nutrition in wound healing: an overview. Br J Nurs. 2021; 30: S38-S42.
  • 9. Norman K, Pichard C, Lochs H, Pirlich M. Prognostic impact of disease-related malnutrition. Clin Nutr. 2008; 27: 5-15.
  • 10. McWhirter JP, Pennington CR. Incidence and recognition of malnutrition in hospital. BMJ. 1994; 308: 945-948.
  • 11. Kowanko I, Simon S, Wood J. Nutritional care of the patient: nurses' knowledge and attitudes in an acute care setting. J Clin Nurs. 1999; 8: 217-224.
  • 12. Waitzberg DL, Caiaffa WT, Correia MI. Hospital malnutrition: the Brazilian national survey (IBRANUTRI): a study of 4000 patients. Nutrition. 2001; 17: 573-580.
  • 13. Correia MI, Campos AC, Study EC. Prevalence of hospital malnutrition in Latin America: the multicenter ELAN study. Nutrition. 2003; 19: 823-825.
  • 14. Mengi Celik O, Semerci R. Evaluation of nutrition literacy and nutrition knowledge level in nursing students: a study from Turkey. BMC Nurs. 2022; 21: 359.
  • 15. Furman-Assaf S, Accos-Carmel M, Kolobov T, Blaychfeld- Magnazi M, Endevelt R, Tamir O. Attitudes and perceived knowledge of health professionals on the food labelling reform in Israel. Public Health Nutr. 2023; 26: 1513-1521.
  • 16. Temple NJ. Survey of nutrition knowledge of Canadian physicians. J Am Coll Nutr. 1999; 18: 26-29.
  • 17. Enyew Belay A, Asemahagn MA, Belay KE, et al. Nurses' nutritional care practice and associated factors for hospitalized surgical patients; the case of referral hospitals in Bahir Dar City, Ethiopia. J Health Popul Nutr. 2025; 44: 100.
  • 18. Kgaphola MS, Wodarski LA, Garrison MEB. Nutrition knowledge of clinic nurses in Lebowa, South Africa: implications for nutrition services delivery. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics. 2003; 10: 295-303.
  • 19. Crogan NL, Shultz JA, Massey LK. Nutrition knowledge of nurses in long-term care facilities. J Contin Educ Nurs. 2001; 32: 171-176.
  • 20. Buxton C, Davies A. Nutritional knowledge levels of nursing students in a tertiary institution: lessons for curriculum planning. Nurse Educ Pract. 2013; 13: 355-360.

Bridging the Knowledge Gap: An Assessment of Clinical Nutrition Preparedness Among Nursing Undergraduates in Hunan Province

Year 2025, Volume: 8 Issue: 2, 41 - 47, 28.08.2025

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the clinical nutrition preparedness of nursing students in the management of diet-related diseases and to identify knowledge gaps that could inform curriculum development. This is crucial as nurses play a pivotal role in patient education and the mitigation of chronic disease.
MATERIALS and METHODS: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted using a self-administered questionnaire. The survey was completed by 258 consenting third and final-year undergraduate nursing students at a major public university in Jinan, Shandong Province. The assessment tool consisted of 20 multiple-choice questions evaluating core nutritional principles relevant to clinical practice.
RESULTS: The mean score achieved by the participants was 10.5±2.45 out of 20, corresponding to a borderline pass rate of 52.5%. The students’ nutritional knowledge was categorized as excellent (2.3%), good (21.7%), adequate (48.1%), and poor (27.9%). There were no statistically significant differences in knowledge scores based on age, gender, or prior clinical experience (p>0.05).
CONCLUSION: The nutritional knowledge of nursing students at this institution is inadequate, reflecting a need for enhanced nutrition education within the nursing curriculum. These findings have significant implications for strengthening the nutritional competence of future nurses in China to better address the burden of diet-related diseases.

Ethical Statement

The study protocol was reviewed and approved by the Institutional Review Board of Jinan Municipal Health Vocational Education College (IRB approval no: JMIRB- 2025-047; approved 15 February 2025). All procedures complied with the Declaration of Helsinki and relevant national regulations. Participation was voluntary; written informed consent was obtained from every student, and all data were anonymized before analysis. Participation was entirely voluntary.

References

  • 1. Warber JI, Warber JP, Simone KA. Assessment of general nutrition knowledge of nurse practitioners in New England. J Am Diet Assoc. 2000; 100: 368-370.
  • 2. Schaller C, James EL. The nutritional knowledge of Australian nurses. Nurse Educ Today. 2005; 25: 405-412.
  • 3. Fletcher A, Carey E. Knowledge, attitudes and practices in the provision of nutritional care. Br J Nurs. 2011; 20: 615- 316, 8-20.
  • 4. Zaghamir DEF, Ibrahim AM. Efficiency of an intervention study on nursing students' knowledge and practices regarding nutrition and dietary habits. Libyan J Med. 2023; 18: 2281121.
  • 5. Kelly IE, Tessier S, Cahill A, Morris SE, Crumley A, McLaughlin D, et al. Still hungry in hospital: identifying malnutrition in acute hospital admissions. QJM. 2000; 93: 93-98.
  • 6. Nugent R. Chronic diseases in developing countries: health and economic burdens. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2008; 1136: 70-79.
  • 7. Zhai F, Wang H, Du S, He Y, Wang Z, Ge K, et al. Prospective study on nutrition transition in China. Nutr Rev. 2009; 67 Suppl 1: S56-S61.
  • 8. Ghaly P, Iliopoulos J, Ahmad M. The role of nutrition in wound healing: an overview. Br J Nurs. 2021; 30: S38-S42.
  • 9. Norman K, Pichard C, Lochs H, Pirlich M. Prognostic impact of disease-related malnutrition. Clin Nutr. 2008; 27: 5-15.
  • 10. McWhirter JP, Pennington CR. Incidence and recognition of malnutrition in hospital. BMJ. 1994; 308: 945-948.
  • 11. Kowanko I, Simon S, Wood J. Nutritional care of the patient: nurses' knowledge and attitudes in an acute care setting. J Clin Nurs. 1999; 8: 217-224.
  • 12. Waitzberg DL, Caiaffa WT, Correia MI. Hospital malnutrition: the Brazilian national survey (IBRANUTRI): a study of 4000 patients. Nutrition. 2001; 17: 573-580.
  • 13. Correia MI, Campos AC, Study EC. Prevalence of hospital malnutrition in Latin America: the multicenter ELAN study. Nutrition. 2003; 19: 823-825.
  • 14. Mengi Celik O, Semerci R. Evaluation of nutrition literacy and nutrition knowledge level in nursing students: a study from Turkey. BMC Nurs. 2022; 21: 359.
  • 15. Furman-Assaf S, Accos-Carmel M, Kolobov T, Blaychfeld- Magnazi M, Endevelt R, Tamir O. Attitudes and perceived knowledge of health professionals on the food labelling reform in Israel. Public Health Nutr. 2023; 26: 1513-1521.
  • 16. Temple NJ. Survey of nutrition knowledge of Canadian physicians. J Am Coll Nutr. 1999; 18: 26-29.
  • 17. Enyew Belay A, Asemahagn MA, Belay KE, et al. Nurses' nutritional care practice and associated factors for hospitalized surgical patients; the case of referral hospitals in Bahir Dar City, Ethiopia. J Health Popul Nutr. 2025; 44: 100.
  • 18. Kgaphola MS, Wodarski LA, Garrison MEB. Nutrition knowledge of clinic nurses in Lebowa, South Africa: implications for nutrition services delivery. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics. 2003; 10: 295-303.
  • 19. Crogan NL, Shultz JA, Massey LK. Nutrition knowledge of nurses in long-term care facilities. J Contin Educ Nurs. 2001; 32: 171-176.
  • 20. Buxton C, Davies A. Nutritional knowledge levels of nursing students in a tertiary institution: lessons for curriculum planning. Nurse Educ Pract. 2013; 13: 355-360.
There are 20 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Fundamentals of Nursing
Journal Section Clinical Research
Authors

Sun Qiang 0009-0007-0310-2837

Lin Yao 0009-0006-4444-1176

Wang Meiling 0009-0007-5548-3651

Publication Date August 28, 2025
Submission Date July 9, 2025
Acceptance Date August 13, 2025
Published in Issue Year 2025 Volume: 8 Issue: 2

Cite

EndNote Qiang S, Yao L, Meiling W (August 1, 2025) Bridging the Knowledge Gap: An Assessment of Clinical Nutrition Preparedness Among Nursing Undergraduates in Hunan Province. Ege Tıp Bilimleri Dergisi 8 2 41–47.

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