Department of Critical Care, Queen Elizabeth II Hospital, Dalhousie University, 1276 South Park St., Halifax, NS, B3H 2Y9, Canada.
Division of Critical Care, Montreal Children's Hospital, Montreal, Canada.
Can J Anaesth. 2017 Oct;64(10):1037-1047. doi: 10.1007/s12630-017-0882-4. Epub 2017 May 3.
The purpose of this survey was to determine how Canadian healthcare professionals perceive their deficiencies and educational requirements related to organ and tissue donation.
We surveyed 641 intensive care unit (ICU) physicians, 1,349 ICU nurses, 1,561 emergency room (ER) physicians, and 1,873 ER nurses. The survey was distributed by the national organization for each profession (the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians, the Canadian Association of Critical Care Nurses, and the National Emergency Nurses Association). Canadian Blood Services developed the critical care physician list in collaboration with the Canadian Critical Care Society. Survey development included questions related to comfort with, and knowledge of, key competencies in organ and tissue donation.
Eight hundred thirty-one (15.3%) of a possible 5,424 respondents participated in the survey. Over 50% of respondents rated the following topics as highly important: knowledge of general organ and tissue donation, neurological determination of death, donation after cardiac death, and medical-legal donation issues. High competency comfort levels ranged from 14.7-50.9% for ICU nurses and 8.0-34.6% for ER nurses. Competency comfort levels were higher for ICU physicians (67.5-85.6%) than for ER physicians who rated all competencies lower. Respondents identified a need for a curriculum on national organ donation and preferred e-learning as the method of education.
Both ICU nurses and ER practitioners expressed low comfort levels with their competencies regarding organ donation. Intensive care unit physicians had a much higher level of comfort; however, the majority of these respondents were specialty trained and working in academic centres with active donation and transplant programs. A national organ donation curriculum is needed.
本调查旨在确定加拿大医疗保健专业人员如何看待他们在器官和组织捐赠方面的不足和教育需求。
我们调查了 641 名重症监护病房(ICU)医生、1349 名 ICU 护士、1561 名急诊室(ER)医生和 1873 名 ER 护士。该调查由每个专业的国家组织(加拿大急诊医师协会、加拿大重症监护护士协会和国家急诊护士协会)分发。加拿大血液服务公司与加拿大重症监护学会合作开发了重症监护医生名单。调查的制定包括与器官和组织捐赠的关键能力相关的问题,包括舒适度和知识。
在可能的 5424 名受访者中,有 831 名(15.3%)参与了调查。超过 50%的受访者认为以下主题非常重要:一般器官和组织捐赠知识、脑死亡的神经学确定、心脏死后捐赠和医学法律捐赠问题。ICU 护士的高能力舒适度范围为 14.7-50.9%,ER 护士为 8.0-34.6%。与 ER 医生相比,ICU 医生的能力舒适度水平更高,后者对所有能力的评价都较低。受访者表示需要一个国家器官捐赠课程,并更喜欢电子学习作为教育方法。
ICU 护士和 ER 从业者都表示对器官捐赠方面的能力感到舒适度较低。重症监护医生的舒适度水平要高得多;然而,这些受访者中的大多数都接受过专业培训,在有活跃捐赠和移植项目的学术中心工作。需要一个国家器官捐赠课程。