NURS FPX 6085 Assessment 5 Evaluation Plan Design
Capella University, MSN, NURS-FPX6085

NURS FPX 6085 Assessment 5 Evaluation Plan Design

NURS FPX 6085 Assessment 5 Evaluation Plan Design Student Name Capella University NURS-FPX6085 MSN Practicum and Capstone Professor Name  Submission Date Evaluation Plan Design To improve patient outcomes, enhance quality of care, and maintain clinical competency within modern healthcare systems, nursing interventions must be assessed for efficacy. Such assessments allow healthcare practitioners to ascertain the effect of the interventions, where they can improve, and how to best inform their evidence-based practice. The purpose of this assessment is to develop an evaluation plan for an orientation program incorporating simulation and designed for a newly recruited cohort of graduate nurses within the high-acuity women’s services. This plan aims to assess whether the intended improvement has been accomplished, assess the effectiveness of the intervention, and provide valuable information for the continued advancement of both nursing practice and patient care. Part 1: Evaluation of Plan Outcomes The primary outcomes of the simulation-based orientation intervention are enhanced clinical competence, critical thinking, and confidence of newly graduated nurses, as well as the ability to provide high-quality, safe, and patient-centered care in maternal and neonatal units of high clinical need. These outcomes achieve the purpose of the intervention and ensure that nurses are prepared to respond to complex and demanding clinical situations. The outcome of the simulation-based orientation intervention is geared toward interprofessional collaboration and sustained engagement with evidence-based practice to create distinct roles, formalized communication, and procedural standardization. Mostafa et al. (2025) identified interprofessional education (IPE) as a time-tested strategy for enhancing collaboration, communication, and the resultant patient outcomes in health care settings. Thus, the outcomes of the intervention will offer a measurable framework for enhancing the quality and safety of care and the overall experience of care. Evaluation Plan The evaluation plan of the simulation-based orientation intervention will measure the outcome of increased clinical competence, critical thinking, and confidence of newly graduated nurses. The degree of performance of the study participants will be assessed through high-fidelity simulation scenarios, evaluation of competencies through checklists, knowledge assessment through pre- and post-intervention tests, reports of clinical errors, indicators of patient safety, and feedback from preceptors and members of the interprofessional team. It will utilize high-fidelity mannequins, electronic health records (EHRs), digital performance assessment systems, and web-based survey applications to ensure that all data related to the research can be obtained and verified. One example of a high-fidelity mannequin is SimMan, created by the company Laerdal. This training mannequin is able to simulate breathing and heart rhythms, as well as some of the most critical and challenging scenarios a health care provider may face, such as cardiac or respiratory arrest (Elendu et al., 2024). For this study, a mixed-methods research design will be employed. In this respect, feedback will be provided through quantitative and qualitative methods. The former will consist of pre- and post- intervention performance assessment, and the latter will be driven by focus group discussions and reflective journals in order to assess and analyze the confidence, ability to work in a team, and communication of the participants. Integration of digital analytics of the simulations and performance assessment systems, coupled with SPSS, will serve as a benchmark for support of data assessment and analysis. Through IBM SPSS, clinics, hospitals, and clinical research institutes will be equipped to meet growing health care needs, challenges of health care resource management, and issues of health care prevention (IBM, 2025). The results will reflect the evaluative plan through the impacts of the intervention on nurses’ readiness and on the clinical care continuum, reduction of clinical errors, standardization of care processes, and enhancement of health care outcomes. Part 2: Discussion Advocacy Nurse’s Role in Leading Change Nurses embody both the spirit and means to lead improvement in the care process and the overall experience of care, and advocate for evidence-based and best practice care within multidisciplinary teams. Regarding the simulation-based orientation intervention, nurses are change agents as they demonstrate evidence-based practices, mentor novice nurses, and embrace structured strategies to enhance both the safety of patients and the quality of clinical outcomes. Many undergraduate training programs socialize persons to practice within isolated professional contexts and do not incorporate training or instruction on teamwork and collaboration. Most novice professionals enter multidisciplinary teams with no prior exposure to the professional practices and roles of their colleagues, and with minimal teamwork and collaboration skills (Mostafa et al., 2025). The leadership ensures that the intervention also enables the novice nurses to enhance their clinical skills and fosters an organizational culture of accountability, patient-centered care, and collaborative problem-solving. By recommending the arrangement of training, the use of standardized handoffs and shifts, and the incorporation of technological tools, nurses promote positive changes to the care delivery processes that enhance the care experience for both patients and staff. Impact of Intervention Plan on Nursing and Interprofessional Practice The simulation-based orientation intervention is fundamental in consolidating the core of the nursing practice within high acuity women’s services and in sustaining the practice of nursing from a perspective of maintaining clinical and personal confidence and a strong sense of purpose in delivering high-quality nursing. In the context of nursing practice, evidence-based practice organizes the best research evidence, nursing expertise, and client needs in a structured way to enhance the quality of care (Brunt and Morris, 2023). This innovative approach promotes the convergence of nursing professionals, medical doctors, educators, and the entire health care team in one clinical setting to plan, direct, and evaluate the best approach to care. It improves the ultimate health care goal of patient safety, enhancing care efficiency and effectiveness while reducing adverse events and increasing safety. This approach, in and outside the nursing profession, enables health care professionals to have a highly skilled and adaptable workforce that embraces and integrates health care technologies. Future Steps Improvements in the Current Project The existing simulation-based orientation intervention to high-acuity clinical units can be expanded to include new graduate nurse mentorship in the workplace. New technologies such as artificial intelligence, virtual reality (VR), and emotionally adaptive technologies that provide real-time feedback