The understandability and quality of telephone-guided bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the Western Cape province of South Africa: A manikin-based study

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE African Journal of Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2023-09-28 DOI:10.1016/j.afjem.2023.09.008
Leonel P De Caires, Katya Evans, Willem Stassen
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Abstract

Background

The incidence of cardiovascular disease is on the increase in Africa and with it, an increase in the incidence of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). OHCA carries a high mortality, especially in low-resource settings. Interventions to treat OHCA, such as mass cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training campaigns are costly. One cost-effective and scalable intervention is telephone-guided bystander CPR (tCPR). Little data exists regarding the quality of tCPR. This study aimed to determine quality of tCPR in untrained members of the public. Participants were also asked to provide their views on the understandability of the tCPR instructions.

Methods

This study followed a prospective, simulation-based observational study design. Adult laypeople who have not had previous CPR training were recruited at public CPR training events and asked to perform CPR on a manikin. Quality was assessed in terms of hand placement, compression rate, compression depth, chest recoil, and chest exposure. tCPR instructions were provided by a trained medical provider, via loudspeaker. Participants were also asked to complete a short questionnaire afterwards, detailing the understandability of the tCPR instructions. Data were analysed descriptively and compared to recommended quality guidance.

Results

Fifty participants were enrolled. Hand placement was accurate in 74 % (n = 37) of participants, while compression depth and chest recoil only had compliance in 20 % (n = 10) and 24 % (n = 12) of participants, respectively. The mean compression rate was within guidelines in just under half (48 %, n = 24) of all participants. Only 20 (40 %) participants exposed the manikin's chest. Only 46 % (n = 23) of participants felt that the overall descriptions offered during the tCPR guidance were understandable, while 80 % (n = 40) and 36 % (n = 18) felt that the instructions on hand placement and compression rate were understandable, respectively. Lastly, 94 % (n = 47) of participants agreed that they would be more likely to perform bystander CPR if they were provided with tCPR.

Conclusion

The quality of CPR performed by laypersons is generally suboptimal and this may affect patient outcomes. There is an urgent need to develop more understandable tCPR algorithms that may encourage bystanders to start CPR and optimise its quality.

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电话引导的旁观者心肺复苏在南非西开普省的可理解性和质量:一项基于人体模型的研究
背景非洲心血管疾病的发病率呈上升趋势,院外心脏骤停(OHCA)的发病率也随之上升。OHCA的死亡率很高,尤其是在资源匮乏的环境中。治疗OHCA的干预措施,如大规模心肺复苏(CPR)培训活动,成本高昂。一种成本效益高且可扩展的干预措施是电话引导的旁观者心肺复苏术(tCPR)。关于tCPR质量的数据很少。本研究旨在确定未经培训的公众中tCPR的质量。与会者还被要求就tCPR指示的可理解性发表意见。方法本研究采用前瞻性的、基于模拟的观察性研究设计。在公共心肺复苏培训活动中招募了以前没有接受过心肺复苏训练的成年非专业人员,并要求他们在人体模型上进行心肺复苏。根据手部位置、压迫率、压迫深度、胸部后坐力和胸部暴露来评估质量。tCPR说明由经过培训的医疗服务提供者通过扬声器提供。参与者随后还被要求完成一份简短的问卷,详细说明tCPR说明的可理解性。对数据进行描述性分析,并与推荐的质量指南进行比较。结果50名参与者被纳入研究。74%(n=37)的参与者的手部放置准确,而压缩深度和胸部后坐力分别只有20%(n=10)和24%(n=12)的参与者符合要求。在所有参与者中,不到一半(48%,n=24)的平均压缩率在指南范围内。只有20名(40%)参与者暴露了人体模型的胸部。只有46%(n=23)的参与者认为tCPR指导期间提供的总体描述是可以理解的,而80%(n=40)和36%(n=18)的参与者分别认为手部放置和压缩率的说明是可以理解。最后,94%(n=47)的参与者同意,如果为他们提供tCPR,他们更有可能进行旁观者心肺复苏术。结论非专业人员进行心肺复苏的质量通常不理想,这可能会影响患者的结果。迫切需要开发更易于理解的tCPR算法,鼓励旁观者开始心肺复苏并优化其质量。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
7.70%
发文量
78
审稿时长
85 days
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