Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, and University of Warwick, Warwick Medical School, Coventry CV4 7AL, United Kingdom.
Ann Intern Med. 2012 Jul 3;157(1):19-28. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-157-1-201207030-00005.
Each year, more than 1.5 million health care professionals receive advanced life support (ALS) training.
To determine whether a blended approach to ALS training that includes electronic learning (e-learning) produces outcomes similar to those of conventional, instructor-led ALS training.
Open-label, noninferiority, randomized trial. Randomization, stratified by site, was generated by Sealed Envelope (Sealed Envelope, London, United Kingdom). (International Standardized Randomized Controlled Trial Number Register: ISCRTN86380392)
31 ALS centers in the United Kingdom and Australia.
3732 health care professionals recruited between December 2008 and October 2010.
A 1-day course supplemented with e-learning versus a conventional 2-day course.
The primary outcome was performance in a cardiac arrest simulation test at the end of the course. Secondary outcomes comprised knowledge- and skill-based assessments, repeated assessment after remediation training, and resource use.
440 of the 1843 participants randomly assigned to the blended course and 444 of the 1889 participants randomly assigned to conventional training did not attend the courses. Performance in the cardiac arrest simulation test after course attendance was lower in the electronic advanced life support (e-ALS) group compared with the conventional advanced life support (c-ALS) group; 1033 persons (74.5%) in the e-ALS group and 1146 persons (80.2%) in the c-ALS group passed (mean difference, -5.7% [95% CI, -8.8% to -2.7%]). Knowledge- and skill-based assessments were similar between groups, as was the final pass rate after remedial teaching, which was 94.2% in the e-ALS group and 96.7% in the c-ALS group (mean difference, -2.6% [CI, -4.1% to 1.2%]). Faculty, catering, and facility costs were $438 per participant for electronic ALS training and $935 for conventional ALS training.
Many professionals (24%) did not attend the courses. The effect on patient outcomes was not evaluated.
Compared with conventional ALS training, an approach that included e-learning led to a slightly lower pass rate for cardiac arrest simulation tests, similar scores on a knowledge test, and reduced costs.
National Institute of Health Research and Resuscitation Council (UK).
每年有超过 150 万名医疗保健专业人员接受高级生命支持(ALS)培训。
确定包括电子学习(e-learning)在内的 ALS 培训混合方法是否与传统的、由讲师主导的 ALS 培训产生的结果相似。
开放性标签、非劣效性、随机试验。随机化按地点分层,由密封信封(伦敦密封信封,英国)生成。(国际标准化随机对照试验注册号:ISCRTN86380392)
英国和澳大利亚的 31 个 ALS 中心。
2008 年 12 月至 2010 年 10 月期间招募的 3732 名医疗保健专业人员。
为期 1 天的课程,辅以电子学习与传统的 2 天课程。
主要结果是课程结束时在心脏骤停模拟测试中的表现。次要结果包括知识和技能评估、补救培训后的重复评估以及资源使用情况。
在接受混合课程的 1843 名参与者中,有 440 名和在接受传统培训的 1889 名参与者中,有 444 名未参加课程。在参加课程后,电子高级生命支持(e-ALS)组的心脏骤停模拟测试表现低于传统高级生命支持(c-ALS)组;e-ALS 组有 1033 人(74.5%)和 c-ALS 组有 1146 人(80.2%)通过(平均差异,-5.7%[95%CI,-8.8%至-2.7%])。两组之间的知识和技能评估相似,补救教学后的最终通过率也相似,e-ALS 组为 94.2%,c-ALS 组为 96.7%(平均差异,-2.6%[CI,-4.1%至 1.2%])。电子 ALS 培训的每位学员费用为 438 美元,传统 ALS 培训的每位学员费用为 935 美元。
许多专业人员(24%)未参加课程。未评估对患者结果的影响。
与传统 ALS 培训相比,包括电子学习在内的方法略降低了心脏骤停模拟测试的通过率,知识测试得分相似,并且降低了成本。
英国国家卫生研究院和复苏理事会(英国)。