Introduction of WHO BEC course for nurses at Bugando Medical Center in Mwanza, Tanzania

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE African Journal of Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2023-09-27 DOI:10.1016/j.afjem.2023.09.004
Nita Avrith , Young Suh , Ramona Sunderwirth , Shahzmah Suleman , Ally Munir Akrabi
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Abstract

Introduction

The Basic Emergency Care (BEC) course is an open-access training designed for frontline providers in low resource settings which focuses on recognizing and managing emergent conditions. This study describes the implementation of the BEC course for nurses at Bugando Medical Center (BMC) in Mwanza, Tanzania in March 2020 as part of an educational initiative to improve nurses’ knowledge and confidence in providing emergency care.

Methods

This is a 2-week educational intervention with pre-post measurements. 12 nurses (cohort 1) received BEC training from in-country facilitators over the course of 4 days. A training-of-trainers (ToT) course followed immediately and the 5 newly trained facilitators then taught the BEC course to 12 additional nurses (cohort 2). Pre- and post-BEC knowledge was assessed with a standardized 25-question multiple choice (MCQ) exam; confidence levels were evaluated using a 4-point Likert scale survey; and qualitative feedback obtained was examined by thematic analysis.

Results

24 participants completed the BEC course, 5 of which completed a ToT to become BEC facilitators. For the combined group, knowledge assessment scores improved significantly from 63.8% to 85.2% with a mean difference of 21.5% (t(24)= 9.3, p<0.0001). Similar improvements were seen when cohort 1 and cohort 2 were analyzed separately. Analysis comparing the results across different demographic groups demonstrated a significant improvement in post-course score for each group. Confidence levels increased significantly across all domains. Main qualitative feedback themes were: quality of teaching; method of teaching; applicability of training to daily nursing practice; more time allotment; and the need to expand the course to other healthcare providers and to rural sites.

Conclusion

Implementation of the BEC course at BMC led to an improvement in nursing emergency care knowledge and self-confidence. The course was well received and the ToT model was successful, giving the nurses the ability to train additional local nurses.

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在坦桑尼亚姆万扎的布甘多医疗中心为护士介绍世界卫生组织BEC课程。
简介:基本急救(BEC)课程是一项开放式培训,专为资源匮乏的一线提供者设计,重点是识别和管理紧急情况。这项研究描述了2020年3月在坦桑尼亚姆万扎的布甘多医疗中心(BMC)为护士开设的BEC课程的实施情况,作为提高护士提供急救知识和信心的教育举措的一部分。方法:这是一项为期两周的教育干预措施,包括前后测量。12名护士(第1组)接受了国内辅导员为期4天的BEC培训。培训师培训(ToT)课程紧随其后,5名新培训的辅导员随后向另外12名护士(第2组)教授BEC课程。BEC前后的知识通过标准化的25题多项选择(MCQ)考试进行评估;使用4点Likert量表调查评估置信水平;并通过专题分析对所获得的定性反馈进行了检验。结果:24名参与者完成了BEC课程,其中5人完成了ToT,成为BEC辅导员。对于合并组,知识评估得分从63.8%显著提高到85.2%,平均差异为21.5%(t(24)=9.3,P结论:在BMC实施BEC课程提高了护理急救知识和自信心。该课程广受欢迎,ToT模式也很成功,使护士能够培训更多的当地护士。
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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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