Studnek Jonathan R, Infinger Allison E, Renn Megan L, Weiss Patricia M, Condle Joseph P, Flickinger Katharyn L, Kroemer Andrew J, Curtis Brett R, Xun Xiaoshuang, Divecha Ayushi A, Coppler Patrick J, Bizhanova Zhadyra, Sequeira Denisse J, Lang Eddy, Higgins J Stephen, Patterson P Daniel
Prehosp Emerg Care. 2018 Feb 15;22(sup1):81-88. doi: 10.1080/10903127.2017.1384874. Epub 2018 Jan 11.
Modifying the task load of Emergency Medical Services (EMS) personnel may mitigate fatigue, sleep quality and fatigue related risks. A review of the literature addressing task load interventions may benefit EMS administrators as they craft policies related to mitigating fatigue. We conducted a systematic review of the peer-reviewed literature to address the following question: "In EMS personnel, do task load interventions mitigate fatigue, mitigate fatigue-related risks, and/or improve sleep?" (PROSPERO 2016:CRD42016040114).
We performed a systematic review of the literature that described use of randomized controlled trials, quasi-experimental studies, and observational study designs. We retained and reviewed research that involved EMS personnel or similar shift worker groups 18 years of age and older. Studies of 'healthy volunteers' and non-shift worker populations were excluded. Studies were included where the methodology of the study implied a theoretical framework of task load (or workload) affecting fatigue, and then fatigue related outcomes. Outcomes of interest included personnel safety, patient safety, personnel performance, acute fatigue, and cost to system. We used the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology to summarize findings and assess quality of evidence from very low to high quality.
The search strategy yielded 3,394 unique records resulting in 58 records included as potentially eligible. An additional 69 studies were reviewed in full following searches of bibliographies. We detected wide variation in the description and measurement of task load in the retained and excluded research. Among 127 potentially relevant studies reviewed in full, five were judged eligible. None of the retained studies reported findings germane to personnel safety, patient safety, or cost to system. We judged most studies to have serious or very serious risk of bias.
The effect of task load interventions on fatigue, fatigue-related risks, and/or sleep quality was not estimable and the overall quality of evidence was judged low or very low. There was considerable heterogeneity in how task load was defined and measured.
调整紧急医疗服务(EMS)人员的任务负荷可能会减轻疲劳、改善睡眠质量并降低与疲劳相关的风险。对有关任务负荷干预措施的文献进行综述,可能会有助于EMS管理人员制定与减轻疲劳相关的政策。我们对同行评审文献进行了系统综述,以回答以下问题:“在EMS人员中,任务负荷干预措施是否能减轻疲劳、降低与疲劳相关的风险和/或改善睡眠?”(国际前瞻性系统评价注册库编号:CRD42016040114)。
我们对描述使用随机对照试验、准实验研究和观察性研究设计的文献进行了系统综述。我们纳入并审查了涉及18岁及以上EMS人员或类似轮班工人群体的研究。排除了关于“健康志愿者”和非轮班工作人群的研究。若研究方法暗示了任务负荷(或工作量)影响疲劳,进而影响与疲劳相关结果的理论框架,则纳入该研究。感兴趣的结果包括人员安全、患者安全、人员绩效、急性疲劳以及系统成本。我们使用推荐分级、评估、制定与评价(GRADE)方法来总结研究结果,并评估证据质量,证据质量从极低到高质量。
检索策略产生了3394条独特记录,其中58条记录被列为可能符合条件。在对参考文献进行检索后,又对另外69项研究进行了全面审查。我们发现,在纳入和排除的研究中,任务负荷的描述和测量存在很大差异。在全面审查的127项潜在相关研究中,有5项被判定符合条件。保留的研究均未报告与人员安全、患者安全或系统成本相关的结果。我们判定大多数研究存在严重或非常严重的偏倚风险。
任务负荷干预措施对疲劳、与疲劳相关的风险和/或睡眠质量的影响无法估计,证据的总体质量被判定为低或极低。在任务负荷的定义和测量方面存在相当大的异质性。