Lamb Di
RAF Lyneham, Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron, CHIPPENHAM, Wiltshire SN15 4PZ, United Kingdom.
Intensive Crit Care Nurs. 2007 Feb;23(1):33-42. doi: 10.1016/j.iccn.2006.07.002. Epub 2006 Oct 30.
The Royal Air Force Critical Care Air Support Teams (CCASTs) have a philosophy to undertake transfers of critically ill patients from anywhere in the world back to a UK medical facility in a stable or improved clinical condition. The training they receive is primarily taught by traditional didactic methods, with no standardisation of education between teams that are expected to deliver care to the same standard. Notwithstanding there being no current compromise to patient care during air transfer, it was important to consider the benefits of an alternative experiential teaching modality. Experiential learning utilised in the static environment could potentially improve the current CCAST training curriculum and, therefore, improve clinical performance during air transfer.
In the absence of primary research evidence investigating beneficial teaching modalities for medical flight crews, a review of recent literature was undertaken to observe any potential relevance to the aeromedical specialty. This critical review examined recent quantitative research on various modalities of experiential learning and their influence on the critical thinking, higher cognitive and psychomotor skill acquisition by healthcare professionals in a static hospital environment. The main databases were interrogated using the following inclusion criteria: patient simulation, clinical competence, aeromedical, education, computer simulation, critical thinking and problem-based learning. The number of articles obtained was 13; these were coded on methodological strength to reduce the potential for inclusion bias. Nine studies were finally selected for review.
Many small studies have been undertaken, primarily observing benefits of experiential learning to medical students and doctors. No studies show conclusively that simulated learning improves patient outcome, but the body of evidence suggests human patient simulators to be advantageous over other modalities because of their realistic recreation of critical events. They have proven to be at least as effective as traditional teaching by didactic methods.
For CCASTs to have a standardised training curriculum, they should undertake real-time missions in a flight simulator, supported by a human patient simulator programmed to respond to the physiological changes associated with altitude. Real scenarios could then be practised, on demand, in a safe environment as an augmentation to the current training programme. Consequently, those acquired skills could then be carried out with improved proficiency during real missions with a concomitant potential for improvement in the standard of patient care.
英国皇家空军重症护理空中支援小组(CCASTs)秉持一种理念,即把世界各地的重症患者转移回英国的医疗机构,使其临床状况稳定或改善。他们接受的培训主要采用传统的讲授法,预期提供相同标准护理的各小组之间没有标准化的教育。尽管目前在空运过程中患者护理没有受到影响,但考虑采用替代性体验式教学模式的益处很重要。在静态环境中运用体验式学习可能会改进当前的CCAST培训课程,从而提高空运过程中的临床表现。
由于缺乏对医疗飞行机组人员有益教学模式的初步研究证据,对近期文献进行了综述,以观察其与航空医疗专业的潜在相关性。这项批判性综述研究了近期关于各种体验式学习模式及其对静态医院环境中医护人员批判性思维、高级认知和运动技能习得影响的定量研究。使用以下纳入标准查询主要数据库:患者模拟、临床能力、航空医疗、教育、计算机模拟、批判性思维和基于问题的学习。获得的文章数量为13篇;根据方法学强度对这些文章进行编码,以减少纳入偏倚的可能性。最终选择了9项研究进行综述。
已经开展了许多小型研究,主要观察体验式学习对医学生和医生的益处。没有研究确凿表明模拟学习能改善患者预后,但证据表明,由于人体患者模拟器能逼真再现危急事件,因此比其他模式更具优势。事实证明,它们至少与传统讲授法教学一样有效。
为使CCASTs拥有标准化的培训课程,他们应在飞行模拟器中执行实时任务,并由编程为能对与海拔相关的生理变化做出反应的人体患者模拟器提供支持。然后可以在安全环境中按需练习真实场景,作为对当前培训计划的补充。因此,在实际任务中运用这些习得技能时,熟练程度会提高,同时患者护理标准也有可能得到改善。