The impact of high-fidelity simulation training on first-year nursing students’ attitudes toward communication skills learning: A quasi-experimental study
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Publication date
2025
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Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Arrogante, O., Ortuño-Soriano, I., Fernandes-Ribeiro, A. S., Raurell-Torredà, M., Jiménez-Rodríguez, D., & Zaragoza-García, I. (2025). The impact of high-fidelity simulation training on first-year nursing students’ attitudes toward communication skills learning: A quasi-experimental study. Clinical Simulation in Nursing, 101. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.ECNS.2025.101711
Abstract
Background
Communication skills are essential for fostering nurse-patient relationships and ensuring quality nursing care, making them a critical competency in nursing education. Attitudes constitute powerful behavioral indicators and influence the learning process of nursing students.
Aim
This study evaluated the effects of high-fidelity simulation training on first-year nursing students' attitudes toward learning communication skills.
Methods
A total of 149 first-year students participated in a quasi-experimental study, in which their attitudes toward learning communication skills were compared between baseline and after the simulation experience. The standardized patient performed different behaviors during each simulated nursing consultation: assertive, passive/noncompliant, depressed, aggressive, and agitated.
Results
Nursing students significantly improved their attitudes toward learning communication skills after the simulation sessions.
Conclusion
High-fidelity simulation training using standardized patients allows first-year nursing students to improve their attitudes toward learning communication skills. This improvement can provide benefits directly related to nurse-patient relationships and high-quality nursing care. Therefore, the inclusion of simulation training programs in nursing curricula is necessary to promote these attitudes in order to prepare undergraduate nursing students for real clinical practice.












