Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Advanced Technology Clinical Simulation Manikins in Improving the Capability of Australian Paramedics to Deliver High-Quality Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: Pre- and Postintervention Study.

Q2 Medicine JMIR Cardio Pub Date : 2024-12-24 DOI:10.2196/49895
Alison Zucca, Jamie Bryant, Jeffrey Purse, Stuart Szwec, Robert Sanson-Fisher, Lucy Leigh, Mike Richer, Alan Morrison
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Abstract

Background: Emergency medical services attend out-of-hospital cardiac arrests all across Australia. Resuscitation by emergency medical services is attempted in nearly half of all cases. However, resuscitation skills can degrade over time without adequate exposure, which negatively impacts patient survival. Consequently, for paramedics working in areas with low out-of-hospital cardiac arrest case volumes, ambulance services and professional bodies recognize the importance of alternative ways to maintain resuscitation skills. Simulation-based training via resuscitation manikins offers a potential solution for maintaining paramedic clinical practice skills.

Objective: The aim of the study is to examine the effectiveness of advanced technology clinical simulation manikins and accompanying simulation resources (targeted clinical scenarios and debriefing tools) in improving the demonstrable capability of paramedics to deliver high-quality patient care, as measured by external cardiac compression (ECC) performance.

Methods: A pre- and postintervention study design without a control group was used. Data were collected at the start of the manikin training forum (baseline), immediately following the training forum (time 2), and 6 to 11 months after the training forum (time 3). The study was conducted with paramedics from 95 NSW Ambulance locations (75 regional locations and 20 metropolitan locations). Eligible participants were paramedics who were employed by NSW Ambulance (N=106; 100% consent rate). As part of the intervention, paramedics attended a training session on the use of advanced technology simulation manikins. Manikins were then deployed to locations for further use. The main outcome measure was an overall compression score that was automatically recorded and calculated by the simulator manikin in 2-minute cycles. This score was derived from compressions that were fully released and with the correct hand position, adequate depth, and adequate rate.

Results: A total of 106 (100% consent rate) paramedics participated, primarily representing regional ambulance locations (n= 75, 78.9%). ECC compression scores were on average 95% or above at all time points, suggesting high performance. No significant differences over time (P>.05) were identified for the overall ECC performance score, compressions fully released, compressions with adequate depth, or compressions with the correct hand position. However, paramedics had significantly lower odds (odds ratio 0.30, 95% CI 0.12-0.78) of achieving compressions with adequate rate at time 3 compared to time 2 (P=.01). Compressions were of a slower rate, with an average difference of 2.1 fewer compressions every minute.

Conclusions: Despite this difference in compression rate over time, this did not cause significant detriment to overall ECC performance. Training and deployment of simulator manikins did not significantly change paramedics' overall ECC performance. The high baseline performance (ceiling effect) of paramedics in this sample may have prevented the potential increase in skills and performance.

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先进技术临床模拟人体模型在提高澳大利亚护理人员提供高质量心肺复苏能力方面的有效性评估:干预前和干预后研究。
背景:紧急医疗服务参加院外心脏骤停全澳大利亚。在所有病例中,近一半的人试图通过紧急医疗服务进行复苏。然而,如果没有足够的暴露,复苏技能会随着时间的推移而退化,这对患者的生存产生负面影响。因此,对于在院外心脏骤停病例量低的地区工作的护理人员,救护车服务和专业机构认识到维持复苏技能的替代方法的重要性。通过复苏人体模型进行的基于模拟的培训为维持护理人员的临床实践技能提供了一个潜在的解决方案。目的:该研究的目的是检验先进技术临床模拟人体模型和伴随的模拟资源(有针对性的临床场景和汇报工具)在提高护理人员提供高质量患者护理的可论证能力方面的有效性,这是通过心外按压(ECC)性能来衡量的。方法:采用不设对照组的干预前后研究设计。数据在人体模型培训论坛开始时(基线)、培训论坛结束后(时间2)和培训论坛结束后6至11个月(时间3)收集。该研究由来自95个新南威尔士州救护车地点(75个地区地点和20个大都市地点)的护理人员进行。符合条件的参与者是受雇于NSW救护车的护理人员(N=106;100%同意率)。作为干预措施的一部分,护理人员参加了一个关于使用先进技术模拟人体模型的培训课程。人体模型随后被部署到其他地点以供进一步使用。主要结果测量是总压缩评分,由模拟人体在2分钟周期内自动记录和计算。该评分来源于完全释放的压迫,以及正确的手位、适当的深度和适当的速率。结果:共有106名(100%同意率)护理人员参与,主要代表区域救护车点(n= 75, 78.9%)。在所有时间点,ECC压缩分数平均为95%或更高,表明性能很高。随着时间的推移,在整体ECC性能评分、完全释放的压迫、足够深度的压迫或正确手位的压迫方面,没有发现显著差异(P>.05)。然而,与时间2相比,护理人员在时间3获得适当按压率的几率明显较低(比值比0.30,95% CI 0.12-0.78) (P= 0.01)。压缩速率较慢,平均每分钟减少2.1次压缩。结论:尽管随着时间的推移压缩率存在差异,但这并不会对整体ECC性能造成显著损害。训练和部署模拟人体模型并没有显著改变护理人员的整体ECC性能。本样本中护理人员的高基线表现(天花板效应)可能阻碍了技能和表现的潜在增长。
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来源期刊
JMIR Cardio
JMIR Cardio Computer Science-Computer Science Applications
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
12 weeks
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