Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 7th Floor, Central Wing 7C09 34th Street and Civic Center Boulevard, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Pediatrics. 2011 Jul;128(1):e145-51. doi: 10.1542/peds.2010-2105. Epub 2011 Jun 6.
To investigate the effectiveness of brief bedside cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training to improve the skill retention of hospital-based pediatric providers. We hypothesized that a low-dose, high-frequency training program (booster training) would improve CPR skill retention.
CPR recording/feedback defibrillators were used to evaluate CPR quality during simulated arrest. Basic life support-certified, hospital-based providers were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 study arms: (1) instructor-only training; (2) automated defibrillator feedback only; (3) instructor training combined with automated feedback; and (4) control (no structured training). Each session (time: 0, 1, 3, and 6 months after training) consisted of a pretraining evaluation (60 seconds), booster training (120 seconds), and a posttraining evaluation (60 seconds). Excellent CPR was defined as chest compression (CC) depth ≥ one-third anterior-posterior chest depth, rate ≥90 and ≤120 CC per minute, ≤20% of CCs with incomplete release (>2500 g), and no flow fraction ≤ 0.30.
Eighty-nine providers were randomly assigned; 74 (83%) completed all sessions. Retention of CPR skills was 2.3 times (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.1-4.5; P=.02) more likely after 2 trainings and 2.9 times (95% CI: 1.4-6.2; P=.005) more likely after 3 trainings. The automated defibrillator feedback only group had lower retention rates compared with the instructor-only training group (odds ratio: 0.41 [95% CI: 0.17-0.97]; P = .043).
Brief bedside booster CPR training improves CPR skill retention. Our data reveal that instructor-led training improves retention compared with automated feedback training alone. Future studies should investigate whether bedside training improves CPR quality during actual pediatric arrests.
研究简短床边心肺复苏(CPR)培训对提高医院内儿科医护人员技能保持率的效果。我们假设,低剂量、高频次的培训方案(强化培训)会改善 CPR 技能的保持率。
使用 CPR 记录/反馈除颤器评估模拟心搏骤停时的 CPR 质量。基础生命支持认证的医院内医护人员被随机分配到以下 4 个研究组中的 1 个:(1)教员培训;(2)仅自动除颤器反馈;(3)教员培训加自动反馈;和(4)对照组(无结构化培训)。每个培训阶段(时间:培训后 0、1、3 和 6 个月)包括预培训评估(60 秒)、强化培训(120 秒)和培训后评估(60 秒)。优秀的 CPR 定义为胸外按压(CC)深度≥前-后胸深度的三分之一,频率≥90 次/分钟且≤120 次/分钟,不完全释放(>2500 g)的 CC 比例≤20%,且无血流分数≤0.30。
共 89 名医护人员被随机分配,其中 74 名(83%)完成了所有培训阶段。经过 2 次培训,CPR 技能的保持率提高了 2.3 倍(95%置信区间:1.1-4.5;P=0.02),经过 3 次培训,CPR 技能的保持率提高了 2.9 倍(95%置信区间:1.4-6.2;P=0.005)。与教员培训组相比,仅自动除颤器反馈组的保持率较低(比值比:0.41 [95%置信区间:0.17-0.97];P=0.043)。
简短床边强化 CPR 培训可提高 CPR 技能的保持率。我们的数据显示,教员主导的培训与仅自动反馈培训相比,可提高保持率。未来的研究应调查床边培训是否可提高实际儿科心搏骤停时的 CPR 质量。