Division of General Surgery, Keenan Research Center of the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Surg Educ. 2012 May-Jun;69(3):274-81. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2011.11.004. Epub 2012 Jan 4.
Team-based training using crisis resource management (CRM) has gained popularity as a strategy to minimize the impact of medical error during critical events. The purpose of this review was to appraise and summarize the design, implementation, and efficacy of peer-reviewed, simulation-based CRM training programs for postgraduate trainees (residents).
Two independent reviewers conducted a structured literature review, querying multiple medical and allied health databases from 1950 to May 2010 (MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, EBM, and PsycINFO). We included articles that (1) were written in English, (2) were published in peer-reviewed journals, (3) included residents, (4) contained a simulation component, and (5) included a team-based component. Peer-reviewed articles describing the implementation of CRM instruction were critically appraised using the Kirkpatrick framework for evaluating training programs.
Fifteen studies involving a total of 404 residents met inclusion criteria; most studies reported high resident satisfaction for CRM training. In several CRM domains, residents demonstrated significant improvements after training, which did not decay over time. With regard to design, oral feedback may be equivalent to video feedback and single-day interventions may be as efficacious as multiple-day interventions for residents. No studies demonstrated a link between simulation-based CRM training and performance during real-life critical events.
The findings support the utility of CRM programs for residents. A high degree of satisfaction and perceived value reflect robust resident engagement. The iteration of themes from our review provides the basis for the development of best practices in curricula design. A dearth of well-designed, randomized studies preclude the quantification of impact of simulation-based training in the clinical environment.
团队合作培训使用危机资源管理(CRM)作为策略,以最小化关键事件中医疗错误的影响,已得到普及。本研究的目的是评估和总结同行评审的基于模拟的 CRM 培训计划的设计、实施和效果,该培训计划针对的是研究生学员(住院医师)。
两名独立的审查员进行了结构化文献综述,从 1950 年到 2010 年 5 月,查询了多个医学和相关健康数据库(MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、EBM 和 PsycINFO)。我们纳入的文章包括:(1)用英语撰写,(2)发表在同行评审期刊上,(3)包含住院医师,(4)包含模拟部分,(5)包含团队合作部分。使用评估培训计划的 Kirkpatrick 框架对描述 CRM 指导实施的同行评审文章进行了批判性评估。
共有 15 项研究涉及总共 404 名住院医师,符合纳入标准;大多数研究报告住院医师对 CRM 培训的满意度很高。在几个 CRM 领域,住院医师在培训后表现出显著的改善,且随时间推移没有衰减。在设计方面,口头反馈可能与视频反馈等效,且单日干预可能与多日干预对住院医师一样有效。没有研究表明基于模拟的 CRM 培训与真实关键事件中的表现之间存在联系。
研究结果支持 CRM 计划对住院医师的效用。高度的满意度和感知价值反映了住院医师的积极参与。我们的综述主题的迭代为课程设计最佳实践的发展提供了基础。缺乏精心设计的随机研究限制了模拟培训在临床环境中的影响的量化。