Emergency Department, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DU, UK.
Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med. 2010 Jan 14;18:3. doi: 10.1186/1757-7241-18-3.
Advanced resuscitation skills training is an important and enjoyable part of medical training, but requires small group instruction to ensure active participation of all students. Increases in student numbers have made this increasingly difficult to achieve.
A single-blind randomised controlled trial of peer-led vs. expert-led resuscitation training was performed using a group of sixth-year medical students as peer instructors. The expert instructors were a senior and a middle grade doctor, and a nurse who is an Advanced Life Support (ALS) Instructor.A power calculation showed that the trial would have a greater than 90% chance of rejecting the null hypothesis (that expert-led groups performed 20% better than peer-led groups) if that were the true situation. Secondary outcome measures were the proportion of High Pass grades in each groups and safety incidents.The peer instructors designed and delivered their own course material. To ensure safety, the peer-led groups used modified defibrillators that could deliver only low-energy shocks.Blinded assessment was conducted using an Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE). The checklist items were based on International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) guidelines using Ebel standard-setting methods that emphasised patient and staff safety and clinical effectiveness.The results were analysed using Exact methods, chi-squared and t-test.
A total of 132 students were randomised: 58 into the expert-led group, 74 into the peer-led group. 57/58 (98%) of students from the expert-led group achieved a Pass compared to 72/74 (97%) from the peer-led group: Exact statistics confirmed that it was very unlikely (p = 0.0001) that the expert-led group was 20% better than the peer-led group.There were no safety incidents, and High Pass grades were achieved by 64 (49%) of students: 33/58 (57%) from the expert-led group, 31/74 (42%) from the peer-led group. Exact statistics showed that the difference of 15% meant that it was possible that the expert-led teaching was 20% better at generating students with High Passes.
The key elements of advanced cardiac resuscitation can be safely and effectively taught to medical students in small groups by peer-instructors who have undergone basic medical education training.
高级复苏技能培训是医学培训的重要且有趣的一部分,但需要小团体指导才能确保所有学生的积极参与。学生人数的增加使得这越来越难以实现。
使用一组六年级医学生作为同伴指导员进行了一项单盲随机对照试验,比较了同伴指导与专家指导的复苏培训。专家指导员是一名高级医生和一名中级医生,以及一名高级生命支持(ALS)指导员护士。一项功效计算表明,如果这是真实情况,该试验将有超过 90%的机会拒绝零假设(即专家指导组的表现比同伴指导组好 20%)。次要结局指标是每个组中高通过率的比例和安全事件。同伴指导员设计并提供了自己的课程材料。为了确保安全,同伴指导组使用了只能输送低能量电击的改良除颤器。使用基于国际复苏联络委员会(ILCOR)指南的客观结构化临床考试(OSCE)进行盲法评估。检查表项目采用 Ebel 标准设定方法,强调患者和员工安全以及临床效果。结果使用精确方法、卡方检验和 t 检验进行分析。
共有 132 名学生随机分组:58 名进入专家指导组,74 名进入同伴指导组。58/58(98%)名来自专家指导组的学生通过,74/74(97%)名来自同伴指导组的学生通过:精确统计证实,专家指导组比同伴指导组好 20%的可能性非常低(p = 0.0001)。没有安全事件,高通过率为 64 名学生(49%):58/58(57%)来自专家指导组,74/74(42%)来自同伴指导组。精确统计表明,15%的差异意味着专家指导教学有可能使高通过率的学生增加 20%。
经过基本医学教育培训的同伴指导员可以安全有效地向医学生小团体教授高级心脏复苏的关键要素。