Mayo Paul H, Hackney Janel E, Mueck J Tristan, Ribaudo Vanessa, Schneider Roslyn F
Beth Israel Medical Center, University Hospital and Manhattan Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Crit Care Med. 2004 Dec;32(12):2422-7. doi: 10.1097/01.ccm.0000147768.42813.a2.
Patient simulation is emerging as a training technique in the field of medicine. It has particular application in training responses to high-risk, low-frequency clinical events, of which a typical example is in-hospital cardiac arrest. A critical element of response by the cardiac arrest team is initial airway management. In teaching hospitals, medical interns are first responders to in-hospital cardiac arrests. Our objective was to design and test a program using a computer-controlled patient simulator to train medical interns and demonstrate their competence in initial airway management.
Prospective, randomized, controlled, unblinded trial.
Internal medicine residency training program in an urban teaching hospital.
All 50 starting internal medicine interns in July 2002, all Advanced Cardiac Life Support certified in June 2002.
All interns were tested in initial airway management skills and then were randomly assigned to receive either immediate or delayed individualized training using a computer-controlled patient simulator. The computer-simulated training process consisted of a scenario of respiratory arrest. The interns were challenged with the scenario twice following testing. The interns were debriefed extensively and given hands-on training by the attending using the simulator until they achieved perfect performance.
Initial airway management was divided into specific scorable steps. Individual step scores and total scores were recorded for each intern on initial and repeat testing. For 10 months following simulator training, intern airway management skills were scored in actual patient airway events. Despite recent Advanced Cardiac Life Support training and certification, all starting medical interns demonstrated poor airway management skills. The immediate training group showed significant improvement in initial airway management when tested before and 4 wks after training. In contrast, the delayed training group showed no significant improvement. Direct observation of interns in actual initial airway events revealed excellent clinical performance.
Individualized training of medical interns using a computer-controlled patient simulator is an effective means of achieving and measuring competence in initial airway management skills. The improvement appears to be transferable to the bedside of real patients.
患者模拟正成为医学领域的一种培训技术。它在培训对高风险、低频率临床事件的应对方面有特殊应用,其中一个典型例子是院内心脏骤停。心脏骤停团队应对的一个关键要素是初始气道管理。在教学医院,内科实习生是院内心脏骤停的第一反应者。我们的目标是设计并测试一个使用计算机控制的患者模拟器的项目,以培训内科实习生并展示他们在初始气道管理方面的能力。
前瞻性、随机、对照、非盲试验。
城市教学医院的内科住院医师培训项目。
2002年7月开始的所有50名内科实习生,均于2002年6月获得高级心血管生命支持认证。
所有实习生都接受了初始气道管理技能测试,然后被随机分配接受使用计算机控制的患者模拟器的即时或延迟个性化培训。计算机模拟培训过程包括呼吸骤停场景。实习生在测试后针对该场景接受两次挑战。实习生接受了广泛的汇报,并由主治医生使用模拟器进行实践培训,直到他们达到完美表现。
初始气道管理被分为特定的可评分步骤。在初始测试和重复测试时,记录每个实习生的各个步骤得分和总分。在模拟器培训后的10个月里,在实际患者气道事件中对实习生的气道管理技能进行评分。尽管最近接受了高级心血管生命支持培训并获得认证,但所有刚开始的内科实习生都表现出较差的气道管理技能。即时培训组在培训前和培训后4周进行测试时,初始气道管理有显著改善。相比之下,延迟培训组没有显著改善。在实际初始气道事件中对实习生的直接观察显示出出色的临床表现。
使用计算机控制的患者模拟器对内科实习生进行个性化培训是实现和衡量初始气道管理技能能力的有效手段。这种改善似乎可以转移到真实患者的床边。