Cultural Competence of Nursing Students After Their First Supervised Internships: An International Cross-Sectional Study
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2025-07-30Autor
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info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadatos
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. Aim: To assess the level of cultural competence among European nursing students after their first clinical experience.
Design:Adescriptive, cross-sectional studywas conducted in 18 countries and 66 higher institutionswith a sample of 2932 nursing
students.
Methods: The Cultural Competence Assessment (CCA) tool was used in its original version (English) and its validated versions in
Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Turkish, and Lithuanian. The CCA includes 25 items, Likert-type normalized in a 0–100-point scale
with two dimensions: Cultural Awareness and Sensitivity (CAS) subscale and Cultural Competence Behavior (CCB) subscale. An
online anonymized questionnaire was used to collect the variables. The influence of background and acquired factors in CCA was
analyzed with multivariate regression models.
Results: The mean level of cultural competence of the European undergraduate nursing students after their first supervised
internships is at a good level. Significant associations were found between cultural competence level and language of the
questionnaire, gender, religious community, current year of education, leisure stays abroad, and international experiences at home,
but having friends from other countries or cultures was the most important factor to explain CCA. The explained variance of CCA
by these factors was low.
Conclusions: The international perspective of cultural competence among undergraduate nursing students at the starting point
of their clinical experience provided by this study serves as an important preview of where European nursing education currently
stands as a baseline scenario for designing, providing, and assessing adequate educational strategies for being a culturally
competent nurse at the point of graduation.
Implications for the profession and patient care: The study highlights specific factors that contribute to higher levels of
cultural competence. These insights can be used to further improve nursing education by providing more opportunities for
students to engage with diverse cultures, resulting in enhanced cultural competence, which can lead to better patient care and
higher satisfaction in diverse environments.
Cultural Competence of Nursing Students After Their First Supervised Internships: An International Cross-Sectional Study
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
0020-8132Palabras Clave
.cultural competency | cultural evolution | education, nursing | students, nursing | transcultural evolution