The overall aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of hand-held suture exercises on non-locking continuous suture skills used in episiotomy repair in midwifery students. The study, conducted with a randomized, single-blind, controlled design, aimed to generate evidence of psychomotor skill transfer using Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills based performance scores and secondary indicators (time, number of errors, etc.).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
83
Students in this group will be trained in hand-sewing exercises and then be asked to work on sewing skills for one hour three days a week. Hand-sewing exercises will be demonstrated using fabric, sponge, and paper. Straight stitch and basting techniques will be demonstrated.
Tokat Gaziosmanpasa Üniversitesi
Tokat Province, Tokat Province, Turkey (Türkiye)
Tokat Gaziosmanpasa Üniversitesi
Tokat Province, Tokat Province, Turkey (Türkiye)
Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills
It will be used to assess simple running suture skills. The form will include a checklist and a global rating scale. Each general performance criterion is scored from 1 to 5. Each step includes ratings such as "Cannot do," "Can do with little assistance," and "Can do easily." Each scale is scored from 1 to 5. This means the total score can range from 4 to 20. High scores on the scale indicate a good level of general technical skill.
Time frame: All students will be asked to apply a simple running suture to the sponge after the intervention is completed. Evaluators will evaluate students using this form throughout the application (approximately 30 minutes).
Continue sutur skill evaluation form
This form was created by researchers. It contains 10 items. The items are on a 3-point Likert-type scale, ranging from "performed" to "incorrect" or "incomplete." Participants receive 2 points for performing the skill, 1 point for incomplete performance, and 0 points for not performing or performing it incorrectly. The total score ranges from 0 to 20. Higher scores indicate successful implementation.
Time frame: The researchers will monitor and complete the student's application as they complete it. The application will take approximately 30 minutes to complete. Students will be monitored throughout the process using this form (approximately 30 minutes).
Episiotomy Skills Self-Efficacy Scale
The Episiotomy Skills Self-Efficacy Scale (ESSES), developed by Hadımlı et al. (2023), was used to assess participants' self-efficacy perceptions regarding episiotomy application and repair. The scale consists of 17 items on a 5-point Likert-type scale (1 = Strongly disagree - 5 = Strongly agree). A two-factor structure (application and repair) was identified in the development study and was reported to explain 63.4% of the total variance. Turkish validity and reliability analyses were conducted within the scope of the same study, and the Cronbach's alpha coefficient was reported as 0.94.
Time frame: It will be used as a pre-test 5 minutes after the standard training. It will be used as a post-test 5 minutes after students practice the simple running suture.
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Perceived Learning Scale
The Perceived Learning Scale, developed by Rovai et al. (2009), was used to measure students' cognitive, affective, and psychomotor perceptions of learning. The scale was adapted into Turkish by Albayrak, Güngören, and Horzum (2014). The Turkish form consists of nine items, and items 2 and 7 are reverse-scored. The scale is scored on a 5-point Likert-type scale (1 = Strongly disagree - 5 = Strongly agree), with higher scores indicating a stronger perception of learning.
Time frame: It will be used as a pre-test 5 minutes after the standard training. It will be used as a post-test 5 minutes after students practice the simple running suture.
Clinical Skills Self-Efficacy Scale
The Learning Self-Efficacy Scale for Clinical Skills (L-SES), developed by Bayazit, Gonullu, and Dogan (2022) and adapted to Turkish for validity and reliability, was used to assess self-efficacy perceptions related to clinical skills. The scale has a 14-item, single-factor structure and uses a 5-point Likert-type scoring system. The Turkish version's Cronbach's alpha was reported as 0.94.
Time frame: It will be used as a pre-test 5 minutes after the standard training. It will be used as a post-test 5 minutes after students practice the simple running suture.
State-Trait Anxiety Inventory
The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), developed by Spielberger et al. (1983), was used to measure participants' state and trait anxiety levels, along with a form adapted for Turkish by Öner and Le Compte (1985). Two subscales, each consisting of 20 items (STAI-1 = State Anxiety, STAI-2 = Trait Anxiety), are scored on a 4-point Likert-type scale. The total score is calculated by correcting for reverse items.
Time frame: It will be used as a pre-test 5 minutes after the standard training. It will be used as a post-test 5 minutes after students practice the simple running suture.