Critical thinking: the development of an essential skill for nursing students

Affiliations.

  • 1 Nursing Department, Technological Educational Institute of Thessaly, Greece.
  • 2 Nursing Department, Technological Educational Institute of Crete, Greece.
  • 3 State Mental Hospital of Attica "Daphne", Greece.
  • 4 Nursing Department, Alexander Technological Educational Institute of Thessaloniki, Greece.
  • PMID: 25395733
  • PMCID: PMC4216424
  • DOI: 10.5455/aim.2014.22.283-286

Critical thinking is defined as the mental process of actively and skillfully perception, analysis, synthesis and evaluation of collected information through observation, experience and communication that leads to a decision for action. In nursing education there is frequent reference to critical thinking and to the significance that it has in daily clinical nursing practice. Nursing clinical instructors know that students face difficulties in making decisions related to clinical practice. The main critical thinking skills in which nursing students should be exercised during their studies are critical analysis, introductory and concluding justification, valid conclusion, distinguish of facts and opinions, evaluation the credibility of information sources, clarification of concepts and recognition of conditions. Specific behaviors are essentials for enhancing critical thinking. Nursing students in order to learn and apply critical thinking should develop independence of thought, fairness, perspicacity in personal and social level, humility, spiritual courage, integrity, perseverance, self-confidence, interest for research and curiosity. Critical thinking is an essential process for the safe, efficient and skillful nursing practice. The nursing education programs should adopt attitudes that promote critical thinking and mobilize the skills of critical reasoning.

Keywords: clinical nurse education; clinical nursing practice; critical thinking; nursing education.

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  • Volume 10, Issue 1
  • Teaching strategies and outcome assessments targeting critical thinking in bachelor nursing students: a scoping review protocol
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  • http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4086-0086 Frida Westerdahl 1 ,
  • Elisabeth Carlson 1 ,
  • Anne Wennick 1 ,
  • Gunilla Borglin 1 , 2
  • 1 Department of Care Science , Malmö University , Malmö , Sweden
  • 2 Nursing Education , Lovisenberg Diaconal University College , Oslo , Norway
  • Correspondence to Frida Westerdahl; frida.nygren{at}mau.se

Introduction Applying critical thinking is essential for nursing students both in an academic and clinical context. Particularly, as critical thinking is a vital part of nurses’ everyday problem-solving and decision-making processes. Therefore, regardless of the topic taught or the setting in which it is taught, it requires teaching strategies especially targeting students’ critical thinking skills and abilities. One challenge with the latter is the difficulties to assess and evaluate the impact of such teaching strategies on the students’ critical thinking disposition. Hence, our objective will be to review published literature on; existing teaching strategies and outcomes assessments targeting nursing students’ critical thinking skills and abilities.

Methods and analysis Our scoping review will be conducted in accordance with Arksey and O’Malley’s framework for scoping studies. Search strategies will be developed in cooperation with an experienced librarian, and adjusted to each individual database for example, CINAHL, PubMed, PsycINFO, ERIC and ERC. A preliminary search in CINAHL was conducted on the 17 th of July 2019. Peer-reviewed published studies conducted with a qualitative, quantitative or mixed method design and focussing our objectives, will be eligible for inclusion. Included studies will be quality assessed in accordance with their study design. Data will be charted using a standardised extraction form. The qualitative data will be presented through a thematic analyses, and the quantitative data by descriptive numerical analysis. Lastly, nurse educators and nursing students will be consulted for validation of the findings from the scoping review.

Ethics and dissemination Under the Swedish Ethical Review Act (2003:460) this study does not need ethical clearance by a Regional Ethical Review Authority as it not includes any primary empirical data on biological material or sensitive information. The findings will be used to inform the design of a future study aiming to develop an, and subsequently evaluate it, educational intervention targeting teaching strategies focussing on nursing students’ critical thinking skills and abilities.

  • critical thinking abilities
  • critical thinking skills
  • descriptive numerical analysis
  • nurse educators
  • thematic analysis

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https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033214

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Strengths and limitations of this study

To ensure rigour and transparency the upcoming scoping review will be based on (1) a solid methodological framework for scoping studies and (2) the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews checklist.

A minimum of two members of the review team will independently assess study eligibility.

Eligible studies will be quality assessed in accordance with their study design.

To achieve a comprehensive picture of the existing research qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods designs will be included in this scoping review.

One limitation might be the potential risk for publication bias since grey literature will not be included, as this will facilitate charting of teaching strategies and outcome assessments targeting critical thinking skills and abilities as described solely in published research.

Introduction

Applying critical thinking is essential for bachelor nursing students (hereafter nursing students); particularly, considering the complex care situations they regularly will find themselves in after graduation. 1 Care situations that among others require them to work in accordance with established standards 2 to be able to contribute to a safe, evidence based and optimal clinical practice. Given that nursing is based on scientific knowledge, critical thinking is the reasonable reflection to justify nursing actions based on evidence. Skills and abilities in critical thinking have consequently been found to predict nursing competence together with working years, position, title and educational level, that is, Bachelor or Master in Nursing. 3 Critical thinking is, therefore, a crucial component of every registered nurse’s daily activities, aiding problem-solving and decision-making processes. 4

According to Scheffer and Rubenfeld the ability to execute critical thinking in nursing could be seen from two perspectives; habits of the mind (cognition), and skills employed by the critical thinker. 5 Critical thinking can also be seen as a consecutive process including (i) gathering information, (ii) questioning, (iii) analysis and evaluation and (iv) problem-solving and application of theory, that is, the nursing process. 6 This consecutive process of critical thinking needs to be applied both in the clinical area and in the classroom. 7 However, to develop this ability among nursing students is a complex process. To apply critical thinking, the necessary skills and abilities need to be taught and developed during both the students’ clinical placements as well as during their theory courses throughout the nursing education. 4

One challenge with the concept of critical thinking, often highlighted in the literature, and despite its priority within the nursing education, is the interchangeable use of the concepts of critical thinking, clinical reasoning and clinical judgement. 7–9 Concepts that Victor-Chmil describe as; ‘they are not one and the same’ (p 34). It needs to be acknowledged, as the authors of this current protocol do, that critical thinking often is used as a broader term which includes the concepts of clinical reasoning and clinical judgement. 8 According to Alfaro-LeFevre clinical reasoning refers to the process used to solve clinical issues and clinical judgement refers to the outcome or conclusion of this process. 7 Therefore, regardless of the topic taught or the setting in which it is taught, requires teaching strategies especially targeting nursing students’ critical thinking skills and abilities. For these strategies to be favourable, it requires implementation throughout the nursing education, and thereby reflected in all parts of the nursing programmes’ learning objectives and curricula. 10 It has been outlined that teaching strategies such as, problem-based learning, concept-mapping, case-based learning interventions and reflective writing are often used in nursing programmes to support critical thinking. 6 10 11 However, another challenge with critical thinking, besides the interchangeable use of concepts, is the difficulty to assess and evaluate the impact of different teaching strategies on the students’ critical thinking disposition (ie, skills and abilities) as well as the assessment of the different components in the critical thinking process. 8 Previous reviews in the current research area have only included either experimental studies 12 or randomised clinical trials 13 measuring the effectiveness of teaching strategies. Further, other reviews have involved mixed populations including not only nursing students, but also working nurses and nursing managers 14 and midwifery students. 15 Since critical thinking is a vital part of registered nurses’ problem-solving and decision-making, this ability needs to be taught already during the nursing education. It is therefore necessary to focus the educational context of undergraduate nursing taking an extended approach on how teaching strategies targeting critical thinking are described, experienced and assessed. Hence, our overarching objective will be to review published literature on; existing teaching strategies and outcomes assessments targeting nursing students’ critical thinking skills and abilities.

Methods and analysis

The upcoming scoping review will address a broad topic (ie, teaching strategies targeting nursing students’ critical thinking skills and abilities, as well as outcome assessments of such skills and abilities), where a diverse range of study designs can be considered relevant in answering our additionally wide review questions. Our scoping review will therefore be designed in accordance with Arksey and O’Malley’s methodological framework for scoping studies. 16 However, our design will also be informed by other more recent methodological accounts. 17 18 The framework will enable us to identify existing gaps in the literature as well as to summarise, evaluate and disseminate the overall state of research activities within the field. 16 The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews checklist (PRISMA-ScR) was used to prepare this protocol. 19 PRISMA-ScR will also form the base for the upcoming scoping review as standardised reporting guidelines can according to Colquhoun et al support the critical appraisals of published reviews by expanding on their transparency and reproducibility. 20

Stage 1: identifying the research question

The research questions for the upcoming scoping review aims for comprehensiveness, that is, they will be broad to cover the breadth of research evidence in our field of focus. As scoping is an iterative methodological process, 16 it is possible for us to decide to add supplementary questions based on the findings emerging during the review process. A modified 21 PICOS (Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome and Study Setting) framework will aid us in determining the appropriateness of the research questions, as well as guide us in our database searches ( table 1 ).

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Framework (PICOS) for determination of eligibility of review questions

Since the subsequent goal of the upcoming scoping review is to further the knowledge and understanding about how nurse educators via teaching strategies can target the development of nursing students’ critical thinking skills and abilities we will additionally engage in findings of relevance to this. The following tentative research questions were developed to capture the objectives of the upcoming study:

Which are the teaching strategies described in the literature as targeting critical thinking skills and abilities among nursing students?

How are these teaching strategies conceptualised, described and experienced by students and/or nurse educators for example, pros and cons?

Which outcomes are described in the literature as used to assess critical thinking skills and abilities?

Stage 2: identifying relevant studies

The upcoming scoping review will include primary studies utilising qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods, published in peer-reviewed journals. This strategy will support us to achieve a comprehensive picture of the existing research focussing peer-reviewed studies on teaching strategies targeting critical thinking skills and abilities among nursing students, as well as on existing research focussing on outcome assessments of such skills and abilities. No limits will be applied concerning publication year, since we aim at conducting a comprehensive overview of published studies. Studies will be excluded if the population is not identifiable, qualitative and quantitative data is not possible to extract in case of mixed method design or published in other languages than English. All reasons for exclusion will be documented.

In our upcoming scoping review the term ‘teaching strategies’ will be used. Thus, our focus is not the overall educational organisation of teaching (ie, educational strategies) or the students’ individual general learning process (ie, learning strategies). However, as we are aware of the commonly interchangeable use in the literature of the terms; teaching strategies, educational strategies and learning strategies, they will all be included in our searches. Here the term teaching strategies are operationalised in accordance with Banning, and as encompassing three different perspectives; (i) the didactic perspective, which is teacher centred and mainly involves lectures; (ii) the facilitative perspective, focussing on self-directed learning making the students articulate their knowledge and lastly (iii) the Socratic perspective which is emphasising student-centredness and use objective questioning from the teacher. 22

The following databases; CINAHL, PubMed, PsycInfo, ERIC and ERC will be used to search for eligible studies. These databases are chosen to cover a comprehensive sample of literature from healthcare science and education. A search strategy for each database will be developed by the review team with assistance from an experienced librarian. Our strategies will include both database specific heading that is, Medical Subject Headings, keywords and synonyms. All specific headings and key words will be combined using the Boolean operators OR as well as AND. To ensure comprehensiveness, included studies reference lists will be manually searched. As outlined by Arksey and O’Malley the search strategy should be an iterative process and the search terms could be adjusted while an increased familiarity with the literature is achieved. For this reason, a preliminary pilot search strategy will be applied to the databases and the first 100 search results will be reviewed by the review team to assess validity. 16 During the review team meetings, adjustments will be applied to the search strategy and search terms until full agreement is reached. Grey literature (ie, literature that is not formally published in sources such as journal articles or books) will not, as described elsewhere, be included in our upcoming scoping study. 23 This will support us to focus on and to chart how teaching strategies targeting skills and abilities such as critical thinking is described in published peer-reviewed research. A draft of a preliminary search in CINAHL conducted on the 17 th of July 2019 is attached in online supplementary file 1 .

Supplemental material

Stage 3: study selection.

The study selection will first consist of a title and abstract scan. If the title and abstract are in line with the scoping review’s objectives and questions to the literature or if the relevance of the study is unclear a full-text review will follow. Retrieved studies from each database are going to be divided equally among a minimum of two reviewers, who independently will conduct the selection process. 17 To facilitate the process, we are going to use the data programme Rayyan. The programme is a mobile and web application developed to facilitate the screening of title and/or abstract as well as the collaboration between the reviewers. 24 During the study selection process, the first reviewer (FW) will be responsible for regularly convoking the review team for discussions concerning uncertainties and to refine the study selection process. 17 Criteria for inclusion can also be applied ad hoc during the process when acquaintance with the field of research is increased. 16 If any disagreements on study inclusion occur, an additional reviewer will be consulted to determine the final inclusion. 17 The study selection process ( figure 1 ) will be accounted for by the PRISMA flow diagram. 25

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Overview study selection process.

Contrary to Arksey and O’Malley’s methodological framework, 16 studies eligible for inclusion in our scoping review are going to be quality assessed. The assessment of the included studies’ quality will allow us to identify where the research itself is of poor quality, that is, identifying gaps in the existing literature review. According to Grant and Booth the lack of quality assessments in scoping reviews are likely to limit the uptake of the findings. 26 Their sentiment is supported by both Levac, Colquhoun and O’Brien 17 and Daudt, van Mossel and Scott 18 who state that a quality assessment of included studies will likely result in findings more useful for practice. The quality assessment will be conducted by a minimum of two reviewers, who will use the relevant study design checklists from the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP). 27 As, CASP lack a checklist for mixed methods studies, the mixed method appraisal tool will be applied. 28 In the case of any ambiguity concerning a study’s quality assessment, an additional reviewer is going to be consulted. No exclusion of eligible studies will be made on behalf of the quality assessment as studies with limited quality nevertheless can provide a valid rationale as guidance as to where more research is required.

Stage 4: charting data

A data charting form would be developed, and piloted on the first 5 to 10 included studies in this review. The piloting will support the team to reach an agreement on extraction consistency. The latter is especially important, as the extraction will be conducted individually and independently by a minimum of two reviewers. 17 A systematic and analytical approach will be utilised to extract the relevant information of each included study. The variables and themes to be included in order to answer the review’s objective and questions to the literature will be established iteratively ( box 1 ). Thus, the data charting form will be updated throughout the review by one of the reviewers (FW) who will also hold regular discussion with the others in the review team. 17

Tentative data charting form

Author and date.

Study title.

Journal full reference.

Aim, objective and/or research questions.

Study and recruitment context (eg, in what country and where people were recruited).

Participant characteristics (eg, age, gender, education year/semester of study, course (ie, theoretical or clinical placement)).

Sampling method.

Number of study participants.

Study design.

Data collection (eg, what data collection methods were used?).

Data analysis (eg, how was the data analysed?).

Described ethical approval and/or considerations. 29

Described teaching strategies and/or interventions targeting review focus.

Described outcomes and assessments.

Most relevant findings.

Study quality appraisal. 27 28

Tentative ethical requirements influenced by Weingarten, Paul and Leibovici.

Was the study approved by a research ethical committee? (Yes/No)

Was informed consent obtained? (Yes/No)

Were adequate measurements taken to protect personal data? (Yes/No)

Is there a declaration on financial support? (Yes/No)

Is there a declaration on potential conflict of interest? (Yes/No)

Influenced by Weingarten, Paul and Leibovici’s substantial contribution to raise the ethical awareness in reviews, an ethical assess form ( box 2 ) was developed for the upcoming scoping review including five requirements. 29 Included studies valued by the review team as not adhering to the ethical requirements will be excluded at this stage of the scoping review process.

Stage 5: collating, summarising and reporting the results

In the fifth stage, an overview and narrative account of variables and information extracted in stage 4 will be presented, and as highlighted by Arksey and O’Malley no evidence grading will be executed. 16 Levac, Colquhoun and O’Brien 17 and Daudt, Van Mossel and Scott 18 suggest that the extracted qualitative data should be presented through thematic analysis, since no synthesis of data is required. 16 For this purpose, the thematic analysis by Braun and Clarke will be applied which is a flexible method suitable when the data is broad and allowing for a wide range of analytical options. 30 This cohere with the upcoming scoping review, which will include studies with a wide range of research questions and methods. Quantitative data will be reviewed through basic descriptive numerical analysis and presented in tables and charts to highlight the range of data. 16 If studies with a mixed method design are included in stage 3, the qualitative and quantitative data will be extracted and analysed separately. A minimum of two reviewers will be responsible for this stage of the scoping review process. During the process, meetings with the entire review team will be scheduled by the first reviewer (FW) to discuss and come to agreement concerning analysis and presentation of extracted data.

Stage 6: consultation stage

To validate the findings of this scoping study and make it more useful for practice the optional stage consultation will be applied. For this purpose, the findings from the scoping review will be presented to a group of educators and students connected to a nursing programme as a means to contribute with valuable insights on issues connected to the application and implementation of the findings.

Patient and public involvement

No patients have been involved in the design of this study. However, to conduct a study targeting teaching strategies for critical thinking in nursing education will eventually benefit patients since education is the foundation for raising future nurses and improve patient care.

Ethics and dissemination

Under the Swedish Ethical Review Act (2003:460) 31 this study does not need ethical clearance by a Regional Ethical Review Authority as it does not include any primary empirical data on biological material or sensitive information (eg, ethnicity, political or sexual orientation). However, the issue of ethical consideration in the execution of reviews is raised by Vergnes et al 32 as well as by Weingarten, Paul and Leibovici. 29 They state that without an ethical judgement of the included studies it could result in establishing clinical practise and guidelines based on studies with poor ethical quality and even unethical studies. It could further be seen as a way of increasing the awareness and necessity of high ethical standards in research. To meet these requirements one variable in the charting form will be ethical consideration and for that purpose a tentative checklist for ethical requirements was developed ( box 2 ). The checklist will be tested on a minimum of 10 publications, and revised accordingly if necessary.

The upcoming scoping review will contribute to the advancement of research concerning teaching strategies targeting nursing students’ skills and abilities in critical thinking and the outcome assessment of it. It will also provide an indication of the maturity of the literature by identifying research gaps. Gaining more knowledge of the targeted research area can act as a benchmark to implement new teaching strategies facilitating students’ critical thinking disposition within the nursing education. This will better prepare future nurses for the complex care situations they will approach. Our findings will be used to inform the design of a future study aiming to develop and evaluate an educational intervention targeting teaching strategies focussing on nursing students’ critical thinking skills and abilities. The upcoming scoping review will be published in a peer-reviewed journal. We expect to report in late spring 2020.

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Contributors FW, EC, AW and GB were responsible for the initial design of this study. FW conceptualised the review approach and led the writing of the manuscript. FW, EC, AW and GB contributed to the protocol’s development and approved the final version of this protocol. GB, EC and AW led the supervision of the manuscript preparation.

Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Competing interests None declared.

Patient consent for publication Not required.

Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

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Nurses are critical thinkers

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Margaret McCartney: Nurses must be allowed to exercise professional judgment

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The characteristic that distinguishes a professional nurse is cognitive rather than psychomotor ability. Nursing practice demands that practitioners display sound judgement and decision-making skills as critical thinking and clinical decision making is an essential component of nursing practice. Nurses’ ability to recognize and respond to signs of patient deterioration in a timely manner plays a pivotal role in patient outcomes (Purling & King 2012). Errors in clinical judgement and decision making are said to account for more than half of adverse clinical events (Tomlinson, 2015). The focus of the nurse clinical judgement has to be on quality evidence based care delivery, therefore, observational and reasoning skills will result in sound, reliable, clinical judgements. Clinical judgement, a concept which is critical to the nursing can be complex, because the nurse is required to use observation skills, identify relevant information, to identify the relationships among given elements through reasoning and judgement. Clinical reasoning is the process by which nurses observe patients status, process the information, come to an understanding of the patient problem, plan and implement interventions, evaluate outcomes, with reflection and learning from the process (Levett-Jones et al, 2010). At all times, nurses are responsible for their actions and are accountable for nursing judgment and action or inaction.

The speed and ability by which the nurses make sound clinical judgement is affected by their experience. Novice nurses may find this process difficult, whereas the experienced nurse should rely on her intuition, followed by fast action. Therefore education must begin at the undergraduate level to develop students’ critical thinking and clinical reasoning skills. Clinical reasoning is a learnt skill requiring determination and active engagement in deliberate practice design to improve performance. In order to acquire such skills, students need to develop critical thinking ability, as well as an understanding of how judgements and decisions are reached in complex healthcare environments.

As lifelong learners, nurses are constantly accumulating more knowledge, expertise, and experience, and it’s a rare nurse indeed who chooses to not apply his or her mind towards the goal of constant learning and professional growth. Institute of Medicine (IOM) report on the Future of Nursing, stated, that nurses must continue their education and engage in lifelong learning to gain the needed competencies for practice. American Nurses Association (ANA), Scope and Standards of Practice requires a nurse to remain involved in continuous learning and strengthening individual practice (p.26)

Alfaro-LeFevre, R. (2009). Critical thinking and clinical judgement: A practical approach to outcome-focused thinking. (4th ed.). St Louis: Elsevier

The future of nursing: Leading change, advancing health, (2010). https://campaignforaction.org/resource/future-nursing-iom-report

Levett-Jones, T., Hoffman, K. Dempsey, Y. Jeong, S., Noble, D., Norton, C., Roche, J., & Hickey, N. (2010). The ‘five rights’ of clinical reasoning: an educational model to enhance nursing students’ ability to identify and manage clinically ‘at risk’ patients. Nurse Education Today. 30(6), 515-520.

NMC (2010) New Standards for Pre-Registration Nursing. London: Nursing and Midwifery Council.

Purling A. & King L. (2012). A literature review: graduate nurses’ preparedness for recognising and responding to the deteriorating patient. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 21(23–24), 3451–3465

Thompson, C., Aitken, l., Doran, D., Dowing, D. (2013). An agenda for clinical decision making and judgement in nursing research and education. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 50 (12), 1720 - 1726 Tomlinson, J. (2015). Using clinical supervision to improve the quality and safety of patient care: a response to Berwick and Francis. BMC Medical Education, 15(103)

Competing interests: No competing interests

critical thinking in nursing peer reviewed articles

  • Research article
  • Open access
  • Published: 07 October 2020

Impact of social problem-solving training on critical thinking and decision making of nursing students

  • Soleiman Ahmady 1 &
  • Sara Shahbazi   ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0001-8397-6233 2 , 3  

BMC Nursing volume  19 , Article number:  94 ( 2020 ) Cite this article

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The complex health system and challenging patient care environment require experienced nurses, especially those with high cognitive skills such as problem-solving, decision- making and critical thinking. Therefore, this study investigated the impact of social problem-solving training on nursing students’ critical thinking and decision-making.

This study was quasi-experimental research and pre-test and post-test design and performed on 40 undergraduate/four-year students of nursing in Borujen Nursing School/Iran that was randomly divided into 2 groups; experimental ( n  = 20) and control (n = 20). Then, a social problem-solving course was held for the experimental group. A demographic questionnaire, social problem-solving inventory-revised, California critical thinking test, and decision-making questionnaire was used to collect the information. The reliability and validity of all of them were confirmed. Data analysis was performed using SPSS software and independent sampled T-test, paired T-test, square chi, and Pearson correlation coefficient.

The finding indicated that the social problem-solving course positively affected the student’ social problem-solving and decision-making and critical thinking skills after the instructional course in the experimental group ( P  < 0.05), but this result was not observed in the control group ( P  > 0.05).

Conclusions

The results showed that structured social problem-solving training could improve cognitive problem-solving, critical thinking, and decision-making skills. Considering this result, nursing education should be presented using new strategies and creative and different ways from traditional education methods. Cognitive skills training should be integrated in the nursing curriculum. Therefore, training cognitive skills such as problem- solving to nursing students is recommended.

Peer Review reports

Continuous monitoring and providing high-quality care to patients is one of the main tasks of nurses. Nurses’ roles are diverse and include care, educational, supportive, and interventional roles when dealing with patients’ clinical problems [ 1 , 2 ].

Providing professional nursing services requires the cognitive skills such as problem-solving, decision-making and critical thinking, and information synthesis [ 3 ].

Problem-solving is an essential skill in nursing. Improving this skill is very important for nurses because it is an intellectual process which requires the reflection and creative thinking [ 4 ].

Problem-solving skill means acquiring knowledge to reach a solution, and a person’s ability to use this knowledge to find a solution requires critical thinking. The promotion of these skills is considered a necessary condition for nurses’ performance in the nursing profession [ 5 , 6 ].

Managing the complexities and challenges of health systems requires competent nurses with high levels of critical thinking skills. A nurse’s critical thinking skills can affect patient safety because it enables nurses to correctly diagnose the patient’s initial problem and take the right action for the right reason [ 4 , 7 , 8 ].

Problem-solving and decision-making are complex and difficult processes for nurses, because they have to care for multiple patients with different problems in complex and unpredictable treatment environments [ 9 , 10 ].

Clinical decision making is an important element of professional nursing care; nurses’ ability to form effective clinical decisions is the most significant issue affecting the care standard. Nurses build 2 kinds of choices associated with the practice: patient care decisions that affect direct patient care and occupational decisions that affect the work context or teams [ 11 , 12 , 13 , 14 , 15 , 16 ].

The utilization of nursing process guarantees the provision of professional and effective care. The nursing process provides nurses with the chance to learn problem-solving skills through teamwork, health management, and patient care. Problem-solving is at the heart of nursing process which is why this skill underlies all nursing practices. Therefore, proper training of this skill in an undergraduate nursing program is essential [ 17 ].

Nursing students face unique problems which are specific to the clinical and therapeutic environment, causing a lot of stresses during clinical education. This stress can affect their problem- solving skills [ 18 , 19 , 20 , 21 ]. They need to promote their problem-solving and critical thinking skills to meet the complex needs of current healthcare settings and should be able to respond to changing circumstances and apply knowledge and skills in different clinical situations [ 22 ]. Institutions should provide this important opportunity for them.

Despite, the results of studies in nursing students show the weakness of their problem-solving skills, while in complex health environments and exposure to emerging diseases, nurses need to diagnose problems and solve them rapidly accurately. The teaching of these skills should begin in college and continue in health care environments [ 5 , 23 , 24 ].

It should not be forgotten that in addition to the problems caused by the patients’ disease, a large proportion of the problems facing nurses are related to the procedures of the natural life of their patients and their families, the majority of nurses with the rest of health team and the various roles defined for nurses [ 25 ].

Therefore, in addition to above- mentioned issues, other ability is required to deal with common problems in the working environment for nurses, the skill is “social problem solving”, because the term social problem-solving includes a method of problem-solving in the “natural context” or the “real world” [ 26 , 27 ]. In reviewing the existing research literature on the competencies and skills required by nursing students, what attracts a lot of attention is the weakness of basic skills and the lack of formal and systematic training of these skills in the nursing curriculum, it indicates a gap in this area [ 5 , 24 , 25 ]. In this regard, the researchers tried to reduce this significant gap by holding a formal problem-solving skills training course, emphasizing the common social issues in the real world of work. Therefore, this study was conducted to investigate the impact of social problem-solving skills training on nursing students’ critical thinking and decision-making.

Setting and sample

This quasi-experimental study with pretest and post-test design was performed on 40 undergraduate/four-year nursing students in Borujen nursing school in Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences. The periods of data collection were 4 months.

According to the fact that senior students of nursing have passed clinical training and internship programs, they have more familiarity with wards and treatment areas, patients and issues in treatment areas and also they have faced the problems which the nurses have with other health team personnel and patients and their families, they have been chosen for this study. Therefore, this study’s sampling method was based on the purpose, and the sample size was equal to the total population. The whole of four-year nursing students participated in this study and the sample size was 40 members. Participants was randomly divided in 2 groups; experimental ( n  = 20) and control (n = 20).

The inclusion criteria to take part in the present research were students’ willingness to take part, studying in the four-year nursing, not having the record of psychological sickness or using the related drugs (all based on their self-utterance).

Intervention

At the beginning of study, all students completed the demographic information’ questionnaire. The study’s intervening variables were controlled between the two groups [such as age, marital status, work experience, training courses, psychological illness, psychiatric medication use and improving cognitive skills courses (critical thinking, problem- solving, and decision making in the last 6 months)]. Both groups were homogeneous in terms of demographic variables ( P  > 0.05). Decision making and critical thinking skills and social problem solving of participants in 2 groups was evaluated before and 1 month after the intervention.

All questionnaires were anonymous and had an identification code which carefully distributed by the researcher.

To control the transfer of information among the students of two groups, the classification list of students for internships, provided by the head of nursing department at the beginning of semester, was used.

Furthermore, the groups with the odd number of experimental group and the groups with the even number formed the control group and thus were less in contact with each other.

The importance of not transferring information among groups was fully described to the experimental group. They were asked not to provide any information about the course to the students of the control group.

Then, training a course of social problem-solving skills for the experimental group, given in a separate course and the period from the nursing curriculum and was held in 8 sessions during 2 months, using small group discussion, brainstorming, case-based discussion, and reaching the solution in small 4 member groups, taking results of the social problem-solving model as mentioned by D-zurilla and gold fried [ 26 ]. The instructor was an assistant professor of university and had a history of teaching problem-solving courses. This model’ stages are explained in Table  1 .

All training sessions were performed due to the model, and one step of the model was implemented in each session. In each session, the teacher stated the educational objectives and asked the students to share their experiences in dealing to various workplace problems, home and community due to the topic of session. Besides, in each session, a case-based scenario was presented and thoroughly analyzed, and students discussed it.

Instruments

In this study, the data were collected using demographic variables questionnaire and social problem- solving inventory – revised (SPSI-R) developed by D’zurilla and Nezu (2002) [ 26 ], California critical thinking skills test- form B (CCTST; 1994) [ 27 , 28 ] and decision-making questionnaire.

SPSI-R is a self - reporting tool with 52 questions ranging from a Likert scale (1: Absolutely not – 5: very much).

The minimum score maybe 25 and at a maximum of 125, therefore:

The score 25 and 50: weak social problem-solving skills.

The score 50–75: moderate social problem-solving skills.

The score higher of 75: strong social problem-solving skills.

The reliability assessed by repeated tests is between 0.68 and 0.91, and its alpha coefficient between 0.69 and 0.95 was reported [ 26 ]. The structural validity of questionnaire has also been confirmed. All validity analyses have confirmed SPSI as a social problem - solving scale.

In Iran, the alpha coefficient of 0.85 is measured for five factors, and the retest reliability coefficient was obtained 0.88. All of the narratives analyzes confirmed SPSI as a social problem- solving scale [ 29 ].

California critical thinking skills test- form B(CCTST; 1994): This test is a standard tool for assessing the basic skills of critical thinking at the high school and higher education levels (Facione & Facione, 1992, 1998) [ 27 ].

This tool has 34 multiple-choice questions which assessed analysis, inference, and argument evaluation. Facione and Facione (1993) reported that a KR-20 range of 0.65 to 0.75 for this tool is acceptable [ 27 ].

In Iran, the KR-20 for the total scale was 0.62. This coefficient is acceptable for questionnaires that measure the level of thinking ability of individuals.

After changing the English names of this questionnaire to Persian, its content validity was approved by the Board of Experts.

The subscale analysis of Persian version of CCTST showed a positive high level of correlation between total test score and the components (analysis, r = 0.61; evaluation, r = 0.71; inference, r = 0.88; inductive reasoning, r = 0.73; and deductive reasoning, r = 0.74) [ 28 ].

A decision-making questionnaire with 20 questions was used to measure decision-making skills. This questionnaire was made by a researcher and was prepared under the supervision of a professor with psychometric expertise. Five professors confirmed the face and content validity of this questionnaire. The reliability was obtained at 0.87 which confirmed for 30 students using the test-retest method at a time interval of 2 weeks. Each question had four levels and a score from 0.25 to 1. The minimum score of this questionnaire was 5, and the maximum score was 20 [ 30 ].

Statistical analysis

For analyzing the applied data, the SPSS Version 16, and descriptive statistics tests, independent sample T-test, paired T-test, Pearson correlation coefficient, and square chi were used. The significant level was taken P  < 0.05.

The average age of students was 21.7 ± 1.34, and the academic average total score was 16.32 ± 2.83. Other demographic characteristics are presented in Table  2 .

None of the students had a history of psychiatric illness or psychiatric drug use. Findings obtained from the chi-square test showed that there is not any significant difference between the two groups statistically in terms of demographic variables.

The mean scores in social decision making, critical thinking, and decision-making in whole samples before intervention showed no significant difference between the two groups statistically ( P  > 0.05), but showed a significant difference after the intervention ( P  < 0.05) (Table  3 ).

Scores in Table  4 showed a significant positive difference before and after intervention in the “experimental” group ( P  < 0.05), but this difference was not seen in the control group ( P  > 0.05).

Among the demographic variables, only a positive relationship was seen between marital status and decision-making skills (r = 0.72, P  < 0.05).

Also, the scores of critical thinking skill’ subgroups and social problem solving’ subgroups are presented in Tables  5 and 6 which showed a significant positive difference before and after intervention in the “experimental” group (P < 0.05), but this difference was not seen in the control group ( P  > 0.05).

In the present study conducted by some studies, problem-solving and critical thinking and decision-making scores of nursing students are moderate [ 5 , 24 , 31 ].

The results showed that problem-solving skills, critical thinking, and decision-making in nursing students were promoted through a social problem-solving training course. Unfortunately, no study has examined the effect of teaching social problem-solving skills on nursing students’ critical thinking and decision-making skills.

Altun (2018) believes that if the values of truth and human dignity are promoted in students, it will help them acquire problem-solving skills. Free discussion between students and faculty on value topics can lead to the development of students’ information processing in values. Developing self-awareness increases students’ impartiality and problem-solving ability [ 5 ]. The results of this study are consistent to the results of present study.

Erozkan (2017), in his study, reported there is a significant relationship between social problem solving and social self-efficacy and the sub-dimensions of social problem solving [ 32 ]. In the present study, social problem -solving skills training has improved problem -solving skills and its subdivisions.

The results of study by Moshirabadi (2015) showed that the mean score of total problem-solving skills was 89.52 ± 21.58 and this average was lower in fourth-year students than other students. He explained that education should improve students’ problem-solving skills. Because nursing students with advanced problem-solving skills are vital to today’s evolving society [ 22 ]. In the present study, the results showed students’ weakness in the skills in question, and holding a social problem-solving skills training course could increase the level of these skills.

Çinar (2010) reported midwives and nurses are expected to use problem-solving strategies and effective decision-making in their work, using rich basic knowledge.

These skills should be developed throughout one’s profession. The results of this study showed that academic education could increase problem-solving skills of nursing and midwifery students, and final year students have higher skill levels [ 23 ].

Bayani (2012) reported that the ability to solve social problems has a determining role in mental health. Problem-solving training can lead to a level upgrade of mental health and quality of life [ 33 ]; These results agree with the results obtained in our study.

Conducted by this study, Kocoglu (2016) reported nurses’ understanding of their problem-solving skills is moderate. Receiving advice and support from qualified nursing managers and educators can enhance this skill and positively impact their behavior [ 31 ].

Kashaninia (2015), in her study, reported teaching critical thinking skills can promote critical thinking and the application of rational decision-making styles by nurses.

One of the main components of sound performance in nursing is nurses’ ability to process information and make good decisions; these abilities themselves require critical thinking. Therefore, universities should envisage educational and supportive programs emphasizing critical thinking to cultivate their students’ professional competencies, decision-making, problem-solving, and self-efficacy [ 34 ].

The study results of Kirmizi (2015) also showed a moderate positive relationship between critical thinking and problem-solving skills [ 35 ].

Hong (2015) reported that using continuing PBL training promotes reflection and critical thinking in clinical nurses. Applying brainstorming in PBL increases the motivation to participate collaboratively and encourages teamwork. Learners become familiar with different perspectives on patients’ problems and gain a more comprehensive understanding. Achieving these competencies is the basis of clinical decision-making in nursing. The dynamic and ongoing involvement of clinical staff can bridge the gap between theory and practice [ 36 ].

Ancel (2016) emphasizes that structured and managed problem-solving training can increase students’ confidence in applying problem-solving skills and help them achieve self-confidence. He reported that nursing students want to be taught in more innovative ways than traditional teaching methods which cognitive skills training should be included in their curriculum. To this end, university faculties and lecturers should believe in the importance of strategies used in teaching and the richness of educational content offered to students [ 17 ].

The results of these recent studies are adjusted with the finding of recent research and emphasize the importance of structured teaching cognitive skills to nurses and nursing students.

Based on the results of this study on improving critical thinking and decision-making skills in the intervention group, researchers guess the reasons to achieve the results of study in the following cases:

In nursing internationally, problem-solving skills (PS) have been introduced as a key strategy for better patient care [ 17 ]. Problem-solving can be defined as a self-oriented cognitive-behavioral process used to identify or discover effective solutions to a special problem in everyday life. In particular, the application of this cognitive-behavioral methodology identifies a wide range of possible effective solutions to a particular problem and enhancement the likelihood of selecting the most effective solution from among the various options [ 27 ].

In social problem-solving theory, there is a difference among the concepts of problem-solving and solution implementation, because the concepts of these two processes are different, and in practice, they require different skills.

In the problem-solving process, we seek to find solutions to specific problems, while in the implementation of solution, the process of implementing those solutions in the real problematic situation is considered [ 25 , 26 ].

The use of D’zurilla and Goldfride’s social problem-solving model was effective in achieving the study results because of its theoretical foundations and the usage of the principles of cognitive reinforcement skills. Social problem solving is considered an intellectual, logical, effort-based, and deliberate activity [ 26 , 32 ]; therefore, using this model can also affect other skills that need recognition.

In this study, problem-solving training from case studies and group discussion methods, brainstorming, and activity in small groups, was used.

There are significant educational achievements in using small- group learning strategies. The limited number of learners in each group increases the interaction between learners, instructors, and content. In this way, the teacher will be able to predict activities and apply techniques that will lead students to achieve high cognitive taxonomy levels. That is, confront students with assignments and activities that force them to use cognitive processes such as analysis, reasoning, evaluation, and criticism.

In small groups, students are given the opportunity to the enquiry, discuss differences of opinion, and come up with solutions. This method creates a comprehensive understanding of the subject for the student [ 36 ].

According to the results, social problem solving increases the nurses’ decision-making ability and critical thinking regarding identifying the patient’s needs and choosing the best nursing procedures. According to what was discussed, the implementation of this intervention in larger groups and in different levels of education by teaching other cognitive skills and examining their impact on other cognitive skills of nursing students, in the future, is recommended.

Social problem- solving training by affecting critical thinking skills and decision-making of nursing students increases patient safety. It improves the quality of care because patients’ needs are better identified and analyzed, and the best solutions are adopted to solve the problem.

In the end, the implementation of this intervention in larger groups in different levels of education by teaching other cognitive skills and examining their impact on other cognitive skills of nursing students in the future is recommended.

Study limitations

This study was performed on fourth-year nursing students, but the students of other levels should be studied during a cohort from the beginning to the end of course to monitor the cognitive skills improvement.

The promotion of high-level cognitive skills is one of the main goals of higher education. It is very necessary to adopt appropriate approaches to improve the level of thinking. According to this study results, the teachers and planners are expected to use effective approaches and models such as D’zurilla and Goldfride social problem solving to improve problem-solving, critical thinking, and decision-making skills. What has been confirmed in this study is that the routine training in the control group should, as it should, has not been able to improve the students’ critical thinking skills, and the traditional educational system needs to be transformed and reviewed to achieve this goal.

Availability of data and materials

The datasets used and analyzed during the present study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Abbreviations

California critical thinking skills test

Social problem-solving inventory – revised

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Acknowledgments

This article results from research project No. 980 approved by the Research and Technology Department of Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences. We would like to appreciate to all personnel and students of the Borujen Nursing School. The efforts of all those who assisted us throughout this research.

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Community-Oriented Nursing Midwifery Research Center, Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences, Shahrekord, Iran

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SA and SSH conceptualized the study, developed the proposal, coordinated the project, completed initial data entry and analysis, and wrote the report. SSH conducted the statistical analyses. SA and SSH assisted in writing and editing the final report. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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Ahmady, S., Shahbazi, S. Impact of social problem-solving training on critical thinking and decision making of nursing students. BMC Nurs 19 , 94 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12912-020-00487-x

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  • Social problem solving
  • Decision making
  • Critical thinking

BMC Nursing

ISSN: 1472-6955

critical thinking in nursing peer reviewed articles

The Value of Critical Thinking in Nursing

Gayle Morris, BSN, MSN

  • How Nurses Use Critical Thinking
  • How to Improve Critical Thinking
  • Common Mistakes

Male nurse checking on a patient

Some experts describe a person’s ability to question belief systems, test previously held assumptions, and recognize ambiguity as evidence of critical thinking. Others identify specific skills that demonstrate critical thinking, such as the ability to identify problems and biases, infer and draw conclusions, and determine the relevance of information to a situation.

Nicholas McGowan, BSN, RN, CCRN, has been a critical care nurse for 10 years in neurological trauma nursing and cardiovascular and surgical intensive care. He defines critical thinking as “necessary for problem-solving and decision-making by healthcare providers. It is a process where people use a logical process to gather information and take purposeful action based on their evaluation.”

“This cognitive process is vital for excellent patient outcomes because it requires that nurses make clinical decisions utilizing a variety of different lenses, such as fairness, ethics, and evidence-based practice,” he says.

How Do Nurses Use Critical Thinking?

Successful nurses think beyond their assigned tasks to deliver excellent care for their patients. For example, a nurse might be tasked with changing a wound dressing, delivering medications, and monitoring vital signs during a shift. However, it requires critical thinking skills to understand how a difference in the wound may affect blood pressure and temperature and when those changes may require immediate medical intervention.

Nurses care for many patients during their shifts. Strong critical thinking skills are crucial when juggling various tasks so patient safety and care are not compromised.

Jenna Liphart Rhoads, Ph.D., RN, is a nurse educator with a clinical background in surgical-trauma adult critical care, where critical thinking and action were essential to the safety of her patients. She talks about examples of critical thinking in a healthcare environment, saying:

“Nurses must also critically think to determine which patient to see first, which medications to pass first, and the order in which to organize their day caring for patients. Patient conditions and environments are continually in flux, therefore nurses must constantly be evaluating and re-evaluating information they gather (assess) to keep their patients safe.”

The COVID-19 pandemic created hospital care situations where critical thinking was essential. It was expected of the nurses on the general floor and in intensive care units. Crystal Slaughter is an advanced practice nurse in the intensive care unit (ICU) and a nurse educator. She observed critical thinking throughout the pandemic as she watched intensive care nurses test the boundaries of previously held beliefs and master providing excellent care while preserving resources.

“Nurses are at the patient’s bedside and are often the first ones to detect issues. Then, the nurse needs to gather the appropriate subjective and objective data from the patient in order to frame a concise problem statement or question for the physician or advanced practice provider,” she explains.

Top 5 Ways Nurses Can Improve Critical Thinking Skills

We asked our experts for the top five strategies nurses can use to purposefully improve their critical thinking skills.

Case-Based Approach

Slaughter is a fan of the case-based approach to learning critical thinking skills.

In much the same way a detective would approach a mystery, she mentors her students to ask questions about the situation that help determine the information they have and the information they need. “What is going on? What information am I missing? Can I get that information? What does that information mean for the patient? How quickly do I need to act?”

Consider forming a group and working with a mentor who can guide you through case studies. This provides you with a learner-centered environment in which you can analyze data to reach conclusions and develop communication, analytical, and collaborative skills with your colleagues.

Practice Self-Reflection

Rhoads is an advocate for self-reflection. “Nurses should reflect upon what went well or did not go well in their workday and identify areas of improvement or situations in which they should have reached out for help.” Self-reflection is a form of personal analysis to observe and evaluate situations and how you responded.

This gives you the opportunity to discover mistakes you may have made and to establish new behavior patterns that may help you make better decisions. You likely already do this. For example, after a disagreement or contentious meeting, you may go over the conversation in your head and think about ways you could have responded.

It’s important to go through the decisions you made during your day and determine if you should have gotten more information before acting or if you could have asked better questions.

During self-reflection, you may try thinking about the problem in reverse. This may not give you an immediate answer, but can help you see the situation with fresh eyes and a new perspective. How would the outcome of the day be different if you planned the dressing change in reverse with the assumption you would find a wound infection? How does this information change your plan for the next dressing change?

Develop a Questioning Mind

McGowan has learned that “critical thinking is a self-driven process. It isn’t something that can simply be taught. Rather, it is something that you practice and cultivate with experience. To develop critical thinking skills, you have to be curious and inquisitive.”

To gain critical thinking skills, you must undergo a purposeful process of learning strategies and using them consistently so they become a habit. One of those strategies is developing a questioning mind. Meaningful questions lead to useful answers and are at the core of critical thinking .

However, learning to ask insightful questions is a skill you must develop. Faced with staff and nursing shortages , declining patient conditions, and a rising number of tasks to be completed, it may be difficult to do more than finish the task in front of you. Yet, questions drive active learning and train your brain to see the world differently and take nothing for granted.

It is easier to practice questioning in a non-stressful, quiet environment until it becomes a habit. Then, in the moment when your patient’s care depends on your ability to ask the right questions, you can be ready to rise to the occasion.

Practice Self-Awareness in the Moment

Critical thinking in nursing requires self-awareness and being present in the moment. During a hectic shift, it is easy to lose focus as you struggle to finish every task needed for your patients. Passing medication, changing dressings, and hanging intravenous lines all while trying to assess your patient’s mental and emotional status can affect your focus and how you manage stress as a nurse .

Staying present helps you to be proactive in your thinking and anticipate what might happen, such as bringing extra lubricant for a catheterization or extra gloves for a dressing change.

By staying present, you are also better able to practice active listening. This raises your assessment skills and gives you more information as a basis for your interventions and decisions.

Use a Process

As you are developing critical thinking skills, it can be helpful to use a process. For example:

  • Ask questions.
  • Gather information.
  • Implement a strategy.
  • Evaluate the results.
  • Consider another point of view.

These are the fundamental steps of the nursing process (assess, diagnose, plan, implement, evaluate). The last step will help you overcome one of the common problems of critical thinking in nursing — personal bias.

Common Critical Thinking Pitfalls in Nursing

Your brain uses a set of processes to make inferences about what’s happening around you. In some cases, your unreliable biases can lead you down the wrong path. McGowan places personal biases at the top of his list of common pitfalls to critical thinking in nursing.

“We all form biases based on our own experiences. However, nurses have to learn to separate their own biases from each patient encounter to avoid making false assumptions that may interfere with their care,” he says. Successful critical thinkers accept they have personal biases and learn to look out for them. Awareness of your biases is the first step to understanding if your personal bias is contributing to the wrong decision.

New nurses may be overwhelmed by the transition from academics to clinical practice, leading to a task-oriented mindset and a common new nurse mistake ; this conflicts with critical thinking skills.

“Consider a patient whose blood pressure is low but who also needs to take a blood pressure medication at a scheduled time. A task-oriented nurse may provide the medication without regard for the patient’s blood pressure because medication administration is a task that must be completed,” Slaughter says. “A nurse employing critical thinking skills would address the low blood pressure, review the patient’s blood pressure history and trends, and potentially call the physician to discuss whether medication should be withheld.”

Fear and pride may also stand in the way of developing critical thinking skills. Your belief system and worldview provide comfort and guidance, but this can impede your judgment when you are faced with an individual whose belief system or cultural practices are not the same as yours. Fear or pride may prevent you from pursuing a line of questioning that would benefit the patient. Nurses with strong critical thinking skills exhibit:

  • Learn from their mistakes and the mistakes of other nurses
  • Look forward to integrating changes that improve patient care
  • Treat each patient interaction as a part of a whole
  • Evaluate new events based on past knowledge and adjust decision-making as needed
  • Solve problems with their colleagues
  • Are self-confident
  • Acknowledge biases and seek to ensure these do not impact patient care

An Essential Skill for All Nurses

Critical thinking in nursing protects patient health and contributes to professional development and career advancement. Administrative and clinical nursing leaders are required to have strong critical thinking skills to be successful in their positions.

By using the strategies in this guide during your daily life and in your nursing role, you can intentionally improve your critical thinking abilities and be rewarded with better patient outcomes and potential career advancement.

Frequently Asked Questions About Critical Thinking in Nursing

How are critical thinking skills utilized in nursing practice.

Nursing practice utilizes critical thinking skills to provide the best care for patients. Often, the patient’s cause of pain or health issue is not immediately clear. Nursing professionals need to use their knowledge to determine what might be causing distress, collect vital information, and make quick decisions on how best to handle the situation.

How does nursing school develop critical thinking skills?

Nursing school gives students the knowledge professional nurses use to make important healthcare decisions for their patients. Students learn about diseases, anatomy, and physiology, and how to improve the patient’s overall well-being. Learners also participate in supervised clinical experiences, where they practice using their critical thinking skills to make decisions in professional settings.

Do only nurse managers use critical thinking?

Nurse managers certainly use critical thinking skills in their daily duties. But when working in a health setting, anyone giving care to patients uses their critical thinking skills. Everyone — including licensed practical nurses, registered nurses, and advanced nurse practitioners —needs to flex their critical thinking skills to make potentially life-saving decisions.

Meet Our Contributors

Portrait of Crystal Slaughter, DNP, APRN, ACNS-BC, CNE

Crystal Slaughter, DNP, APRN, ACNS-BC, CNE

Crystal Slaughter is a core faculty member in Walden University’s RN-to-BSN program. She has worked as an advanced practice registered nurse with an intensivist/pulmonary service to provide care to hospitalized ICU patients and in inpatient palliative care. Slaughter’s clinical interests lie in nursing education and evidence-based practice initiatives to promote improving patient care.

Portrait of Jenna Liphart Rhoads, Ph.D., RN

Jenna Liphart Rhoads, Ph.D., RN

Jenna Liphart Rhoads is a nurse educator and freelance author and editor. She earned a BSN from Saint Francis Medical Center College of Nursing and an MS in nursing education from Northern Illinois University. Rhoads earned a Ph.D. in education with a concentration in nursing education from Capella University where she researched the moderation effects of emotional intelligence on the relationship of stress and GPA in military veteran nursing students. Her clinical background includes surgical-trauma adult critical care, interventional radiology procedures, and conscious sedation in adult and pediatric populations.

Portrait of Nicholas McGowan, BSN, RN, CCRN

Nicholas McGowan, BSN, RN, CCRN

Nicholas McGowan is a critical care nurse with 10 years of experience in cardiovascular, surgical intensive care, and neurological trauma nursing. McGowan also has a background in education, leadership, and public speaking. He is an online learner who builds on his foundation of critical care nursing, which he uses directly at the bedside where he still practices. In addition, McGowan hosts an online course at Critical Care Academy where he helps nurses achieve critical care (CCRN) certification.

IMAGES

  1. Why Critical Thinking Skills in Nursing Matter (And What You

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  2. Critical Thinking in Nursing: A Practical Approach

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  4. (PDF) Critical Thinking in Nursing: An Integrated Review

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COMMENTS

  1. Critical Thinking: The Development of an Essential Skill for Nursing Students

    Critical thinking is applied by nurses in the process of solving problems of patients and decision-making process with creativity to enhance the effect. It is an essential process for a safe, efficient and skillful nursing intervention. Critical thinking according to Scriven and Paul is the mental active process and subtle perception, analysis ...

  2. Critical thinking in nursing clinical practice, education and research

    Lastly, we show that critical thinking constitutes a fundamental component in the research process, and can improve research competencies in nursing. We conclude that future research and actions must go further in the search for new evidence and open new horizons, to ensure a positive effect on clinical practice, patient health, student ...

  3. Bridging critical thinking and transformative learning: The role of

    Although the literature on critical thinking and transformative learning has remained ... considering perspective-taking readings at the university level. Traditional academic readings - including textbooks, peer-reviewed journal articles, and scholarly books - tend to make objective, evidence-based arguments to support theoretical ...

  4. Development of nursing students' critical thinking and clinical

    Critical thinking in nursing; it is a thinking process that includes features such as collecting and organizing the data obtained from the patient/healthy individual, deciding on the needs in parallel with these data, choosing one of the possible approaches based on knowledge and developed with applications, and evaluating the results of the ...

  5. How do nurses promote critical thinking in acute care? A scoping

    1.2. Critical thinking in acute care nursing education. Active participation and problem-based learning are strategies used to promote critical thinking in the clinical environment ( Distler, 2007 ). Carter et al. (2016) reviewed teaching tools to promote critical thinking in nursing and midwifery students.

  6. A systematic review of critical thinking in nursing education

    Although previous literature reviews have been conducted relative to CT in nursing education, few recent systematic reviews have been conducted. This systematic review aims to review qualitative studies from 2002 to 2011, in order to explore how critical thinking is perceived in the studies of nursing education, and the obstacles and strategies ...

  7. Critical thinking: the development of an essential skill for nursing

    Nursing students in order to learn and apply critical thinking should develop independence of thought, fairness, perspicacity in personal and social level, humility, spiritual courage, integrity, perseverance, self-confidence, interest for research and curiosity. Critical thinking is an essential process for the safe, efficient and skillful ...

  8. Critical Thinking in Nursing: An Integrated Review

    Abstract. ABSTRACT. Critical thinking skills are essential to function in today's complex health care environment and to ensure continuing competence for the future. This article provides a review of various definitions and research studies related to critical thinking. Educators and researchers need to clearly define critical thinking, because ...

  9. Effectiveness of a critical reflection competency program ...

    The critical thinking of clinical nurses is essential for identifying the needs of patients and providing safe care through prompt and accurate judgment [1,2,3].Critical thinking can be practiced through critical reflection [], a dynamic process in which nurses reflect on their nursing behavior to improve their perspective on a situation and change future nursing practices in a desirable ...

  10. Teaching strategies and outcome assessments targeting critical thinking

    Introduction Applying critical thinking is essential for nursing students both in an academic and clinical context. Particularly, as critical thinking is a vital part of nurses' everyday problem-solving and decision-making processes. Therefore, regardless of the topic taught or the setting in which it is taught, it requires teaching strategies especially targeting students' critical ...

  11. A Consensus Statement on Critical Thinking in Nursing

    A consensus definition (statement) of critical thinking in nursing was achieved. The panel also identified and defined 10 habits of the mind (affective components) and 7 skills (cognitive components) of critical thinking in nursing. The habits of the mind of critical thinking in nursing included: confidence, contextual perspective, creativity ...

  12. Nurses are critical thinkers

    Nurses are critical thinkers. The characteristic that distinguishes a professional nurse is cognitive rather than psychomotor ability. Nursing practice demands that practitioners display sound judgement and decision-making skills as critical thinking and clinical decision making is an essential component of nursing practice.

  13. Facilitating critical thinking in decision making-based professional

    Papastavrou, Hamari, Fuster, Istomina, and Salminen (2016) designed a peer-review activity in which nursing students were asked to review peers' nursing journals written on social media. The experimental results showed that the approach facilitated the students' reflections, knowledge acquisition, and critical thinking.

  14. Impact of social problem-solving training on critical thinking and

    Background The complex health system and challenging patient care environment require experienced nurses, especially those with high cognitive skills such as problem-solving, decision- making and critical thinking. Therefore, this study investigated the impact of social problem-solving training on nursing students' critical thinking and decision-making. Methods This study was quasi ...

  15. The Value of Critical Thinking in Nursing

    Successful nurses think beyond their assigned tasks to deliver excellent care for their patients. For example, a nurse might be tasked with changing a wound dressing, delivering medications, and monitoring vital signs during a shift. However, it requires critical thinking skills to understand how a difference in the wound may affect blood ...

  16. Repeated Simulation Experience on Self-Confidence, Critical Thinking

    30, 2019, English language, peer-reviewed journals, and nursing and ProQuest data base reduced the number to 25. All 25 articles were further analyzed based on the availability of keywords repeated simulation experience and nurses and nursing students' competence, self-confidence, knowledge, critical thinking, and satisfaction with learning.

  17. Sound clinical judgment in nursing: A concept analysis

    Department of Nursing, University of Scranton, Scranton, Pennsylvania. ... Articles in peer reviewed, scholarly journals written in English were considered from 1984 to 2017. Results. ... It results from critical thinking and clinical reasoning. Using these findings, educators and administrators can use valid and reliable methods to identify ...

  18. Lifelong learning and nurses' continuing professional development, a

    Non-peer reviewed journal articles. Theses or dissertations. Editorials, commentary or opinion articles ... A critical moment: NHS staffing trends, retention and attrition. London: Health Foundation; 2019. 28. House of Commons Health Committee . The nursing workforce, second report of session 2017-19. ... Articles from BMC Nursing are ...