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For Nursing Students, Educators & Programs

Practice Patient Conversations Before the Clinical Floor

Nursing students face communication challenges every day — delivering bad news, educating patients about medications, de-escalating agitated individuals, and performing structured handoff reports. Praxplay lets you rehearse these conversations with realistic AI patients so you can communicate with confidence when it matters most.

Communication Gaps Put Patient Safety at Risk

Nurses are clinically trained but often underprepared for the difficult patient conversations that determine outcomes

Without Praxplay

  • Limited sim lab time leaves communication skills underdeveloped
  • No safe space to practice delivering bad news or difficult test results
  • Students freeze during patient education — unsure how to explain clearly
  • SBAR handoffs practiced once in class then forgotten before clinical rotations
  • No rehearsal for de-escalating agitated, confused, or combative patients
  • Difficult end-of-life conversations avoided until students face them with real families
  • Psych nursing rotations provide minimal practice for high-stakes scenarios like patient safety assessments, psychosis, or complex relational dynamics

With Praxplay

  • Unlimited AI patient practice sessions available anytime, anywhere
  • Rehearse bad news delivery with realistic patient reactions and detailed feedback
  • Build patient education confidence by explaining diagnoses, meds, and discharge plans repeatedly
  • Practice SBAR handoffs over and over until the structure becomes second nature
  • De-escalation training on demand with AI patients who present with agitation and confusion
  • Prepare for end-of-life conversations safely before encountering them at the bedside
  • Practice psychiatric nursing scenarios — from patient safety screening to de-escalation with psychotic or manic patients — in a safe environment

Communication Tools Built for Nursing

Every feature designed around the conversations nurses have with patients and families

SBAR Handoff Practice

Practice structured Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation handoff communication with AI-generated patient scenarios. Repeat until the framework becomes automatic — so your clinical handoffs are clear, concise, and complete every time.

Patient Education Conversations

Practice explaining diagnoses, medications, discharge instructions, and home care plans to AI patients with varying health literacy levels. Build the skill of translating complex medical information into language patients understand and remember.

De-escalation Training

Handle agitated, confused, or combative patients in a safe environment. Practice verbal de-escalation techniques, therapeutic communication, and maintaining composure during high-stress patient interactions — without any risk to yourself or others.

End-of-Life Communication

Practice compassionate conversations about goals of care, comfort measures, hospice referrals, and advance directives. Develop the emotional resilience and communication skills needed for these deeply important discussions with patients and families.

Practice on Your Schedule

No scheduling hassles or waiting for sim lab slots. Practice a patient conversation at 6am before clinical or at midnight after a long study session. AI patients are always available whenever you need to prepare or refine your approach.

Instant Feedback & Growth

Receive detailed feedback on your communication approach after every session. Track your progress over time and identify patterns in how you handle patient education, deliver difficult news, and build therapeutic rapport with patients and families.

Ways Nursing Students Use Praxplay

Real patient scenarios you can practice today

Breaking Bad News

Practice delivering difficult test results, unexpected diagnosis information, or changes in patient condition to patients and their families. Build comfort with honest, compassionate delivery that maintains trust and supports emotional processing.

Patient Education & Discharge

Explain medications, home care instructions, follow-up plans, and warning signs to AI patients with varying health literacy levels. Practice using teach-back methods to confirm understanding before patients leave the hospital.

De-escalation & Crisis

Manage agitated, confused, or combative patients using verbal de-escalation techniques. Practice staying calm, setting boundaries, and redirecting patients during high-stress moments — all without risk to anyone involved.

SBAR Handoff Reports

Practice delivering clear, structured Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation reports. Rehearse handoffs for shift changes, rapid response calls, and physician notifications until the framework becomes automatic.

Family Communication

Discuss prognosis with family members, address their concerns and fears, navigate cultural sensitivity, and manage situations where family wishes conflict with patient autonomy. Practice the nuanced conversations that happen beyond the bedside.

End-of-Life Conversations

Practice hospice discussions, comfort care explanations, advance directive conversations, and supporting grieving families. Develop the emotional skills and language needed for these deeply meaningful interactions.

Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing

Mental Health Scenarios That Build Real Skill

Practice the high-stakes conversations that define mental health nursing — from patient safety screening to psychosis, de-escalation, and trauma-informed care

The Quietly At-Risk Patient

A patient admitted for insomnia and "stress" appears calm, polite, and says they're "fine now" — but there are no dramatic cues. The risk is in what isn't said.

Learning focus: Hearing hopelessness beneath coherence, asking direct but compassionate screening questions, and avoiding premature reassurance.

Acute Agitation & De-escalation

An ED patient is pacing, yelling, and demanding to leave. They feel disrespected and are escalating quickly. The student's own anxiety spikes.

Learning focus: Tone management, simple non-confrontational language, and avoiding escalation by arguing, correcting, or "winning."

Psychosis with Mistrust

A patient believes staff are poisoning them. They refuse medication and are suspicious of everyone — including the student.

Learning focus: Engaging the patient's emotional reality without endorsing beliefs, avoiding phrases like "that's not real," and using grounding and curiosity.

Borderline Crisis & Splitting Dynamics

"You're the only one who actually cares." Later: "You're just like the rest of them." The student feels flattered, then attacked. The pull to rescue or defend is strong.

Learning focus: Maintaining consistent boundaries, tolerating emotional swings without reacting defensively, and avoiding "good nurse / bad nurse" dynamics.

Trauma Response Misread as Noncompliance

A patient refuses a routine procedure and becomes shut down when staff insist. Hidden layer: a history of trauma involving bodily violation.

Learning focus: Recognizing trauma responses, shifting from directive to collaborative approach, and restoring a sense of control through choice and consent.

The Charming Manic Patient

An energetic, talkative patient dismisses concerns — "I feel amazing, I don't need meds." They are likable and persuasive. Students may collude with the energy.

Learning focus: Gently interrupting and structuring the interaction, not reinforcing grandiosity, and maintaining clinical focus despite charm.

Substance Withdrawal with Irritability

A patient in early withdrawal is irritable, demanding, and accusatory — "You're not giving me what I need!" The student may feel attacked or become rigid.

Learning focus: Emotional regulation, clear non-defensive explanations, and recognizing physiological vs. interpersonal drivers of behavior.

Family Member in Distress

A patient's spouse confronts the nurse: "Why aren't you doing more? This place is making things worse!" The nurse becomes the target of systemic frustration.

Learning focus: Empathy toward the family without overpromising, clarity of communication, and boundary maintenance without dismissiveness.

Cultural Mistrust & Systemic Context

A patient expresses deep distrust of the healthcare system based on past experiences of discrimination. The student feels unsure how to respond.

Learning focus: Tolerating discomfort, non-defensive acknowledgment of systemic issues, and leading with curiosity rather than avoidance.

End-of-Shift Ethical Dilemma

A patient discloses something clinically concerning right before handoff. The shift is ending, the team is moving on, but the patient needs attention now.

Learning focus: Clinical judgment under time pressure, communication clarity with the incoming team, and ethical prioritization.

Why Nursing Programs Choose Praxplay

Zero Patient Risk

Mistakes become learning moments, not patient safety events. Try different communication approaches, experiment with new techniques, and build confidence — all without any impact on real patients or clinical outcomes.

Scalable for Programs

Every student gets unlimited practice, not just one sim lab slot per semester. Whether your cohort has 30 students or 300, each one can practice patient conversations as often as they need — on their own schedule.

Better Patient Outcomes

Nurses who communicate effectively see higher patient satisfaction scores, better treatment adherence, and fewer adverse events. Investing in communication training directly impacts the quality of care your graduates deliver.

Invest in Your Communication Skills

Less than a single simulation lab session — with unlimited practice

Starting at

$45/month
introductory rates
  • Unlimited AI patient practice sessions
  • SBAR, patient education, and de-escalation scenarios
  • Access to full patient scenario library
  • Detailed feedback after every session
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Private & Secure Practice Environment

Your practice sessions are completely private. Praxplay uses AI patients only — no real patient data or protected health information (PHI) is ever involved. All session data is encrypted and confidential. Practice in a simulated environment that keeps real patient information completely separate and aligns with healthcare data security best practices.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from nursing educators about Praxplay

While Praxplay was originally built for mental health professionals, the core skill it develops — communicating effectively during difficult conversations — is equally critical in nursing. Nurses regularly need to deliver bad news, educate patients about medications and discharge plans, de-escalate agitated patients, perform structured SBAR handoffs, and navigate end-of-life discussions. Praxplay's AI patients can be configured to present with scenarios specific to nursing practice, including therapeutic communication, motivational interviewing for health behavior change, and family communication.
Nursing students can practice a wide range of clinical communication scenarios: delivering difficult test results or diagnoses, explaining medications and discharge instructions, de-escalating agitated or confused patients, performing SBAR (Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation) handoff reports, discussing end-of-life care and advance directives with patients and families, motivational interviewing for health behavior change, navigating cultural sensitivity in patient interactions, and communicating with anxious or non-compliant patients. We also offer dedicated psychiatric and mental health nursing scenarios — including patient safety assessments, engaging patients experiencing psychosis, managing borderline dynamics, recognizing trauma responses, and navigating substance withdrawal conversations. Custom scenarios can also be created to match specific course objectives.
Praxplay is designed to complement simulation labs, not replace them. Sim labs are essential for practicing hands-on clinical skills like IV insertion, wound care, and physical assessment. Praxplay fills a different gap — the communication side of patient care that sim labs often cannot adequately address due to time constraints. Students can use Praxplay to practice unlimited patient conversations on their own time, arriving at sim lab sessions better prepared for the interpersonal aspects of patient care.
Praxplay's AI patients are designed to exhibit authentic behaviors, emotions, and communication patterns. They respond naturally to different approaches — if a student uses medical jargon with a patient who has low health literacy, the AI patient may express confusion. If a student uses empathetic, plain-language communication, the patient engages more openly. The simulations provide a realistic practice environment for developing therapeutic communication skills that transfer to real clinical settings.
Yes. Nursing faculty can create and assign specific patient communication scenarios aligned with course objectives. For example, a medical-surgical nursing course might assign scenarios focused on post-operative patient education, while a psychiatric nursing course might assign de-escalation or therapeutic communication scenarios. Instructors can review student session transcripts and provide feedback on communication techniques.
Praxplay does not currently count toward official clinical hours as defined by nursing accreditation bodies such as ACEN or CCNE. However, it serves as a valuable supplemental learning tool that strengthens the communication competencies students need during clinical rotations. Many nursing programs use Praxplay as part of pre-clinical preparation, helping students build confidence before they interact with real patients in clinical settings.
Absolutely. Praxplay is well suited for interprofessional education (IPE) initiatives. Nursing students can practice SBAR handoffs as they would deliver them to physicians, rehearse collaborative care discussions, and develop communication skills that work across healthcare team roles. Programs that include nursing, medical, social work, or allied health students can all benefit from practicing patient-centered communication on the same platform.
Yes. Praxplay includes a dedicated set of psychiatric and mental health nursing scenarios designed for nursing students in their mental health rotations or psych nursing courses. Students can practice patient safety screening with patients who may be concealing distress, engage patients experiencing psychosis or paranoia without rupturing rapport, navigate borderline crisis dynamics and splitting, recognize trauma responses that may be misread as noncompliance, set limits with manic patients, manage substance withdrawal irritability, and handle family distress. These scenarios help students build the therapeutic communication skills that are difficult to practice in traditional clinical settings.
No real patient data is ever involved. All practice sessions use AI-generated patient scenarios — there are no real patients, no protected health information (PHI), and no HIPAA concerns. Student session data is encrypted and accessible only to the student and their assigned instructor. Praxplay follows healthcare data security best practices to ensure a safe and private learning environment.

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