# Improving critical care nurses’ knowledge of central venous catheter management through education

**Authors:** Tembisa Notshe, Wilma ten Ham-Baloyi, Sindiwe James

PMC · DOI: 10.4102/hsag.v30i0.2966 · Health SA Gesondheid · 2025-07-09

## TL;DR

An 8-week educational program improved critical care nurses' knowledge of central venous catheter management, potentially reducing complications.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that structured education can enhance nurses' knowledge of central venous catheter management in critical care settings.

## Key findings

- The intervention group showed greater improvement in catheter insertion knowledge compared to the control group.
- Both groups improved significantly, but the intervention group had higher pre- and post-test scores.
- The educational program requires further adaptation and institutional support for sustained impact.

## Abstract

Central venous catheters are essential in critical care, but mismanagement risks serious complications, making comprehensive nursing knowledge crucial for their proper use and for safeguarding patient safety.

To describe the effect of an 8-week educational intervention on critical care nurses’ knowledge of central venous catheter management.

Five critical care units in public hospitals in the Eastern Cape, South Africa.

A quasi-experimental, two-group, pre-test-post-test design was used with a convenience sample of nurses working in selected critical care units (intervention n = 72; control n = 50). The intervention group received an 8-week educational intervention including face to face in-service training sessions, written material (brochures) and monitoring visits twice a month, while the control group did not receive this training.

Both groups showed significant knowledge improvements (p < 0.0005), with the intervention group improving more during catheter insertion (+33.7 vs. +23.8; t = –16.68 vs. –5.59) and the control group more after catheter insertion (+33.3 vs. +21.5; t = –7.66 vs. –12.43). The intervention group had significantly higher mean pre-test scores (pre-test: 97.13; post-test: 98.01) compared to the control group (pre-test: 82.91; post-test: 83.76).

The educational intervention showed potential to improve critical care nurses’ knowledge of central venous catheter management but require further adaptation and testing. Orientation, mentoring and continued formal training through institutional support and leadership are recommended.

The use of an 8-week educational intervention can improve critical care nurses’ knowledge of management of central venous cathether management and may enhance practices, ultimately reducing venous catheter-related complications.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12339875/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12339875