Empowering Nursing Students During the AI Era: Educational Strategies for Enhancing Knowledge and Acceptance of Artificial Intelligencets
Published in Healthcare & Nursing and Computational Sciences
Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming healthcare systems worldwide and reshaping the future of nursing education and clinical practice. Despite the increasing integration of AI technologies into healthcare environments, many undergraduate nursing students continue to report limited AI literacy, uncertainty regarding ethical AI use, and insufficient preparation for AI-supported clinical practice.
In our recently published study in BMC Nursing, we evaluated the effectiveness of a standardized 10-session blended educational program designed to improve nursing students’ knowledge, readiness, and acceptance of artificial intelligence. The study involved 1,000 undergraduate nursing students from Sohag University, Egypt, using a one-group pretest–posttest quasi-experimental design.
The educational intervention incorporated micro-lectures, case-based learning, guided ethical reflection, and hands-on demonstrations to strengthen students’ understanding of AI concepts and applications in healthcare. The findings demonstrated substantial improvements in AI knowledge, perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use, and overall acceptance of artificial intelligence in nursing education and healthcare practice.
Our study highlights the importance of integrating structured AI education into undergraduate nursing curricula to prepare future nurses for technologically advanced healthcare systems. It also emphasizes the value of evidence-based educational strategies, interdisciplinary collaboration, and ethical AI awareness in promoting safe, responsible, and accountable AI adoption in nursing practice.
As healthcare continues to evolve through digital transformation, empowering nursing students with AI literacy, critical thinking, and technological readiness has become essential for supporting innovation, patient safety, and high-quality person-centered care.
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