Taira Breena R, Orue Aristides, Stapleton Edward, Lovato Luis, Vangala Sitaram, Tinoco Lucia Solorzano, Morales Orlando
Department of Emergency Medicine, Olive View-UCLA Medical Center, Sylmar, California, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, USA.
J Educ Eval Health Prof. 2016 Jun 9;13:25. doi: 10.3352/jeehp.2016.13.25. eCollection 2016.
Project Strengthening Emergency Medicine, Investing in Learners in Latin America (SEMILLA) created a novel, language and resource appropriate course for the resuscitation of cardiac arrest for Nicaraguan resident physicians. We hypothesized that participation in the Project SEMILLA resuscitation program would significantly improve the physician's management of simulated code scenarios.
Thirteen Nicaraguan resident physicians were evaluated while managing simulated cardiac arrest scenarios before, immediately, and at 6 months after participating in the Project SEMILLA resuscitation program. This project was completed in 2014 in Leon, Nicaragua. The Cardiac Arrest Simulation Test (CASTest), a validated scoring system, was used to evaluate performance on a standardized simulated cardiac arrest scenario. Mixed effect logistic regression models were constructed to assess outcomes.
On the pre-course simulation exam, only 7.7% of subjects passed the test. Immediately post-course, the subjects achieved a 30.8% pass rate and at 6 months after the course, the pass rate was 46.2%. Compared with pre-test scores, the odds of passing the CASTest at 6 months after the course were 21.7 times higher (95% CI 4.2 to 112.8, P<0.001). Statistically significant improvement was also seen on the number of critical items completed (OR=3.75, 95% CI 2.71-5.19), total items completed (OR=4.55, 95% CI 3.4-6.11), and number of "excellent" scores on a Likert scale (OR=2.66, 95% CI 1.85-3.81).
Nicaraguan resident physicians demonstrate improved ability to manage simulated cardiac arrest scenarios after participation in the Project SEMILLA resuscitation course and retain these skills.
“加强急诊医学,投资拉丁美洲学习者项目”(SEMILLA)为尼加拉瓜住院医师创建了一门新颖的、适合语言和资源状况的心脏骤停复苏课程。我们假设参与SEMILLA项目复苏计划将显著改善医生对模拟急救场景的处理能力。
13名尼加拉瓜住院医师在参与SEMILLA项目复苏计划之前、之后立即以及6个月后处理模拟心脏骤停场景时接受评估。该项目于2014年在尼加拉瓜莱昂完成。使用经过验证的评分系统——心脏骤停模拟测试(CASTest)来评估在标准化模拟心脏骤停场景中的表现。构建混合效应逻辑回归模型以评估结果。
在课程前的模拟考试中,只有7.7%的受试者通过测试。课程结束后立即进行测试,受试者的通过率为30.8%,课程结束6个月后的通过率为46.2%。与测试前的分数相比,课程结束6个月后通过CASTest的几率高出21.7倍(95%置信区间4.2至112.8,P<0.001)。在完成的关键项目数量(OR = 3.75,95%置信区间2.71 - 5.19)、完成的总项目数量(OR = 4.55,95%置信区间3.4 - 6.11)以及李克特量表上的“优秀”分数数量(OR = 2.66,95%置信区间1.85 - 3.81)方面也观察到了具有统计学意义的改善。
尼加拉瓜住院医师在参与SEMILLA项目复苏课程后,处理模拟心脏骤停场景的能力有所提高,并保留了这些技能。