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THE EFFECT OF PEER MENTORING ON THE KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS, AND METACOGNITIVE THINKING SKILLS OF NURSING STUDENTS ON POSTPARTUM PERINEAL CARE: AN EXPERIMENTAL TRIAL WITH ONE-GROUP PRETEST-POSTTEST DESIGN

THE EFFECT OF PEER MENTORING ON THE KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS, AND METACOGNITIVE THINKING SKILLS OF NURSING STUDENTS ON POSTPARTUM PERINEAL CARE: AN EXPERIMENTAL TRIAL WITH ONE-GROUP PRETEST-POSTTEST DESIGN

Status
Recruiting
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06926309
Acronym
Perineal care
Enrollment
50
Registered
2025-04-13
Start date
2025-03-20
Completion date
2025-06-28
Last updated
2025-04-13

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Postpartum Perineal Care, Peer Mentoring

Keywords

peer mentoring, skill, postpartum perineal care, undergraduate nursing student, metacognitive thinking

Brief summary

Postpartum perineal care (PPC) is one of the critical skills that should be acquired by students studying in Obstetrics and Gynaecology Nursing under nursing education. Perineal care is a skill that contributes positively to the recovery process of the mother by eliminating the risk of infection through maintaining hygiene of the sutured or non-sutured perineum in postpartum women Peer mentoring is important for both the peer mentor and the peer to practice in accordance with PPC protocols by going through a bidirectional learning experience, for these practices to be evaluated by peer mentors, and for the skill to be experienced in a safe environment. Peer mentoring plays an important role in teaching metacognitive thinking skills as well as the knowledge and skills of peers in nursing education. Although there are studies on the acquisition of skills in peer mentoring in the literature, no study has been found to demonstrate the effect of peer mentoring on the PPC knowledge, skills and metacognitive thinking skills of nursing students. In this context, it is thought that the study will contribute to the literature.

Detailed description

Peer mentoring is one of the methods that emphasises learning as a social process and supports the learning process by sharing knowledge and experience with their/similar (in terms of age, gender, educational background, social status, etc.) peers (Gazula et al., 2017; Sancı & Kelleci, 2019). Peer mentoring is an important process that reinforces and supports learning among peers on personal, social and academic issues (Gazula et al., 2017; Motsaanaka, Makhene & Ally, 2020; Şenyuva & Akince Kocaağalar, 2020). Peer mentoring in nursing education is important for both reinforcing theoretical knowledge and supporting learning from each other by improving skills during practice (Motsaanaka, Makhene & Ally, 2020; Sözer, 2022). During this process, more experienced nursing students (peer mentors) guide less experienced nursing students (peers), share their professional knowledge, and transfer their experiences. Moreover, peers practice skills with peer mentors and exchange ideas (Gray et al., 2019; Sundlera et al., 2019; Şenyuva & Akince Kocaağalar, 2020). Pinks et al., (2021) have found that peer mentoring facilitates the learning processes of students, improves their skills in problem-solving, learning how to learn, interpersonal communication and empathy, and promotes emotional expression and coping skills focused on emotions (Pinks et al., 2021). Different studies have also emphasised the importance of peer mentoring in acquiring academic and individual adjustment, professional motivation, social-emotional learning and clinical skills. Moreover, it has been shown that students experience adjustment problems when they get into the university and receive support from their peer mentors on issues such as regulations, communication with tutors, school activities and study (Aslan & Erci, 2021; Aydemir, 2024; Bahar, Kocaçal & Maraş, 2022; Fard et al., 2020; Korkut & Başer, 2023; Pehlivan Coştu & Bilgiç, 2023; Shohani et al., 2020; Sözer, 2022). Peer mentoring eliminates the hierarchical relationship and power imbalance between tutors and students (Ko, Issenberg & Roh, 2022; Şenyuva & Akince Kocaağalar, 2020). Peer mentoring is utilised in nursing education to provide nursing students with knowledge and attitudes as well as psychomotor skills education (Arasteh, Ghezeljeh, & Haghani, 2018; Aslan & Erci, 2021; Bahar, Kocaçal & Maraş, 2022; Carey et al., 2019; Cheraghi et al., 2021; Dikmen ve ark., 2017; Fard et al., 2020; Kim, 2020; Korkut & Başer, 2023; Öztürk, Aközlü & Taşdelen, 2023; Pålsson et al., 2017; Pehlivan Coştu & Bilgiç, 2023; Shohani et al., 2020; Kim, 2020). The postpartum period is a time when the mother and the baby need much nursing care. The nursing care to be provided during this period is crucial to support both the mother, the newborn and the family to meet their needs. The postpartum period covers the post-natal recovery process of the mother and perineal care is critical for the prevention of infections during this period. The Postpartum Care Management Guide stresses that perineal care is an important practice during the postpartum period (Şimşek & Esencan, 2017). Postpartum perineal care (PPC) is one of the critical skills that should be acquired by students studying in Obstetrics and Gynaecology Nursing under nursing education. Perineal care is a skill that contributes positively to the recovery process of the mother by eliminating the risk of infection through maintaining hygiene of the sutured or non-sutured perineum in postpartum women (Demirci et al., 2014; Şimşek & Esencan, 2017). Peer mentoring is important for both the peer mentor and the peer to practice in accordance with PPC protocols by going through a bidirectional learning experience, for these practices to be evaluated by peer mentors, and for the skill to be experienced in a safe environment (Aslan & Erci, 2021). Peer mentoring plays an important role in teaching metacognitive thinking skills as well as the knowledge and skills of peers in nursing education (Hattie & Timperley, 2007; Topping, 2009). Metacognition refers to the student's awareness of own thinking processes and his/her ability to control/manage these processes. It is an element that supports the student in gaining the ability to learn on their own. It involves critical, logical, reflective, metacognitive and creative thinking and becomes active when facing problems, uncertainties, questions or dilemmas (Karaoğlan-Yılmaz et al., 2019). While peer mentoring teaches PPC knowledge and skills, discussions between peer mentors and peers raise awareness of metacognitive processes. Feedback from peer mentors helps peers recognise their mistakes and critically evaluate and organise their own thinking processes. It allows them to develop their cognitive process skills by observing their thinking and problem-solving strategies. This allows peers who get peer mentoring to improve their problem-solving skills and offer more effective solutions to the problems they face/will face in clinical settings during perineal care, practice perineal care skills independently, and become competent in skills such as critical decision-making, critical thinking, analytical thinking (Motsaanaka, Makhene & Ally, 2020; Joung et al., 2020; Pinks et al., 2021). Although there are studies on the acquisition of skills in peer mentoring in the literature, no study has been found to demonstrate the effect of peer mentoring on the PPC knowledge, skills and metacognitive thinking skills of nursing students. In this context, it is thought that the study will contribute to the literature.

Interventions

The peer mentor selected by the researchers will be given postpartum perineal care education and peer mentoring education. The peer mentor will prepare perineal care education materials under the supervision of the researchers. Then, the experimental group will be divided into small groups and given 4 hours of perineal care education to their peers.

Sponsors

Istanbul University - Cerrahpasa
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

receiving no training on postpartum perineal care before, not working part/full-time employment as a nurse -

Exclusion criteria

Not having given written and verbal consent to participate in the study \-

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Metacognitive Thinking Skills Scale2 weeks post interventionMetacognitive Thinking Skills Scale of the intervention group change after web based education
Postpartum Perineal Care Skill and Knowledge2 weeks post interventionSkill and Knowledge of Postpartum Perineal Care point of the intervention group change after web based education

Countries

Turkey (Türkiye)

Contacts

Primary ContactOlga İncesu Responsible of Skill Laboratory, Dr.
olgaincesu@hotmail.com+905334942989

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026