Background: In 2021, an Australian Hospital Nursing Research Hub sponsored 13 healthcare staff to complete the Graduate Certificate (Clinical Redesign), to build capability in health service improvement though work-integrated learning (WIL). Healthcare professionals undertaking workplace-based WIL likely experience significant challenges including balancing professional and student roles and aligning work with academic requirement. These pressures were likely intensified during the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This study aimed to explore and understand the experiences of hospital healthcare staff completing WIL redesign projects, including the impacts of COVID-19. Methods: A qualitative descriptive inquiry approach was used to explore individual student experiences. Thirteen staff, mostly nurses, who enrolled in the 2021 course were invited to participate. Online semi-structured interviews were conducted. Data were analyzed using a general inductive thematic analysis approach. Results: Four participants (36%) took part; all were female and working full-time. Five main themes were identified that centered around: COVID-19, Support, Motivation, Alignment and Relevance, and Success. Conclusions: Novel insights include the need to reconceptualize “success” to improve student experience, the critical role of organizational–university–student alignment in enabling WIL studies, and the unique pressures of completing WIL during crisis conditions that direct impact the health sector, such as COVID-19. Although not generalizable, these findings are likely to be important considerations more broadly to strengthen WIL design, support and student experiences, ultimately enhancing health service staff capability to lead quality improvement in the workplace.
Waddingham et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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