Case-based, asynchronous sleep education outcomes among primary care nurse practitioner students

J Clin Sleep Med. 2022 Oct 1;18(10):2367-2376. doi: 10.5664/jcsm.10112.

Abstract

Study objectives: Primary care nurse practitioners (NPs) receive little sleep education in graduate programs but are often first-line providers for patients presenting with sleep-related symptoms. A pre-/postevaluation study was conducted using asynchronous, case-based sleep education modules in a cohort of primary care NP students enrolled in a single academic institution's nursing master's degree program.

Methods: Six virtual, case-based modules addressed adult sleep health and disorders, prioritized based on prevalence and primary care presentation. Kirkpatrick Training Evaluation Model guided outcome selection. Descriptive and paired comparative analyses were conducted.

Results: Participants were first-year NP students (n = 149; 88% female; 82% ≤ 35 years of age) in an adult primary care program that included psychiatric/mental health track. Participants reacted positively to course delivery methods and content. Insomnia was endorsed by 87% as most relevant to practice with healthy sleep (88%) and obstructive sleep apnea (50%) also frequently endorsed as practice relevant. Posttest knowledge scores significantly improved for all modules (P < .001). Self-rated confidence for future practice application was high.

Conclusions: This novel asynchronous, virtual curriculum met Kirkpatrick levels 1 and 2 (positive reaction and knowledge transfer) in NP students who predicted an impact on their practice (Kirkpatrick level 3). Studies are needed to assess the benefits of increasing primary care NP knowledge in sleep medicine on quality of care and access to care (Kirkpatrick level 4). Future use of this novel sleep curriculum in other professional curricula, new-to-sleep clinical researchers, and practicing primary care providers may further potentiate care quality and sleep care access.

Citation: Sawyer AM, Saconi B, Lyons MM, et al. Case-based, asynchronous sleep education outcomes among primary care nurse practitioner students. J Clin Sleep Med. 2022;18(10):2367-2376.

Keywords: education measurement; nurse practitioners; professional education; self-evaluation program; sleep; sleep disorders.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Curriculum
  • Education, Nursing, Graduate*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Nurse Practitioners* / education
  • Primary Health Care
  • Sleep
  • Students