Disaster Nursing Knowledge and Competencies Among Nursing University Students Participated in Relief Activities Following the 2016 Kumamoto Earthquakes

SAGE Open Nurs. 2018 Oct 30:4:2377960818804918. doi: 10.1177/2377960818804918. eCollection 2018 Jan-Dec.

Abstract

Objective: This study examined disaster nursing knowledge and competencies among university nursing students who participated in relief activities following the 2016 Kumamoto earthquakes.

Methods: Participants were university nursing students involved in disaster relief activities. Of the 260 individuals to whom a self-report questionnaire was distributed at nursing universities and hospitals located in Kyushu, southwestern Japan, 201 participants returned the questionnaires by mail (response rate 77.3%), of which 108 questionnaires were complete (valid response rate 41.5%). Questions involved experiences related to their volunteer activities, their motive for volunteering, type of relief activities performed, and use of disaster nursing knowledge and competencies.

Results: We identified four categories of disaster nursing competencies: "understanding and implementation of assistance to victims in collaboration with other members of the disaster response team," "understanding the natural disaster's influence on victims," "ethical practice in a disaster recovery area," and "understanding of their role within the disaster relief organization." Those who had completed a disaster nursing program had superior measures of performance across all four competencies compared with those who had not yet completed the program.

Conclusions: Four domains of disaster nursing knowledge and competencies used by university nursing students during the 2016 Kumamoto earthquake relief activities were identified. Those who had completed a disaster nursing program had higher competencies than were those who were either currently or not yet enrolled in it.

Keywords: competency; disaster nursing; disaster relief; nursing student.