Christina Quick, assistant professor of nursing, looks over the
shoulder of Emma Buchele during a day of simulated exercises in the
DeVos Center for Interprofessional Health.
Photo Credit:
Kendra Stanley-Mills
Henry Peña practices suturing during a lab exercise at the Simulation
Center in the DeVos Center for Interprofessional Health.
Photo Credit:
Kendra Stanley-Mills
Tara Young said simulations help her better understand patients at a
youth clinic in Lakeview.
Photo Credit:
Kendra Stanley-Mills
Henry Peña is a nurse with eight years of experience at two Grand
Rapids hospitals.
Still, he said, going through a day of simulations with others in the
Doctor of Nursing Practice cohort will set him up for success on the job.
DNP students completed a suturing lab and practiced communication and
physical assessment skills on standardized patients June 9 at the
Simulation Center in the DeVos Center for Interprofessional Health.
Peña said the exercise of walking into a hospital simulation exam
room, greeting a standardized patient and beginning an evaluation
helps him when he's at his clinical assignment at Exalta Health, a
Grand Rapids integrated medical clinic with a mission to provide care
for the uninsured and underserved.
"These simulations help me think more scientifically and I take
that with me back to the clinic," Peña said.
Christina Quick, assistant professor of nursing, said the DNP
curriculum was modified to allow time for simulation courses before
students begin the heart of their clinical assignments.
"After a full semester of simulation courses, students start at
their clinical assignments and then come to the Simulation Center to
practice and assess their skills," Quick said. "Previously,
students start their clinicals in the winter feeling unprepared with
no simulation courses. This is unique to KCON to have standalone
graduate simulation and procedure courses."
DNP student Tara Young has started an assignment at a clinic for
youth ages 10-21 in Lakeview operated by Spectrum Health United and
Kelsey Hospitals. Young, who worked as an obstetrics nurse for
Corewell Health before beginning the DNP program, agreed with Peña
that simulations were valuable learning experiences.
"I'm learning more about working with pediatric patients and
thinking how I can be a leader," Young said.