# Longitudinal Assessment of Cultural Competencies in Nursing Education: Insights From Students and Nurse Educators

**Authors:** Ermira Tartari, Monique Sciortino, Maria Cassar, Laura Visiers‐Jimenez, Maria Isabel Baeza‐Monedero, Josef Trapani

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/nop2.70339 · 2025-10-26

## TL;DR

This study tracks how nursing students and educators in Malta develop cultural competence over time, finding that experience and age influence improvements.

## Contribution

The study longitudinally evaluates cultural competence in nursing education, linking it to demographic and experiential factors.

## Key findings

- Third-year students showed very good cultural competence with a mean score of 78.24.
- Leisure time abroad and age were significant factors in improving cultural awareness.
- Educators with doctoral qualifications and more teaching experience showed higher cultural competence.

## Abstract

This study aims to evaluate the cultural competencies of undergraduate nursing students and nurse educators and identify associated factors.

Observational, descriptive, longitudinal study conducted in Malta.

Online questionnaires, based on the Cultural Competence Assessment Scale measuring self‐perceived competence and reflections on international experiences, were administered to students during each of the 3 years of an undergraduate nursing programme and once to nurse educators. Descriptive and inferential statistics were applied to examine cultural competence levels and their associations with demographic and experiential factors.

A total of 43, 38 and 34 students participated across the three programme years, respectively, alongside 19 nurse educators (response rates: 51.8% and 70.4%, respectively). Third‐year students demonstrated very good cultural competence with a mean score of 78.24 (out of 100), while educators recorded a slightly lower mean of 73.26. Leisure time abroad before higher education significantly influenced cultural awareness in both first‐ and third‐year students, while age was positively correlated with cultural awareness among final‐year students. For educators, doctoral qualifications were associated with higher cultural awareness, and greater teaching experience correlated with more competent behaviours. Cultural competence improved progressively across the programme, suggesting clinical exposure and maturity play important roles. The inclusion of educators provided a broader perspective, showing that while awareness was strong, behaviour‐based competencies require further support.

Developing cultural competence is expected to improve patient care, safety and communication in increasingly diverse healthcare contexts.

## Full-text entities

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

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12554084