Nabecker Sabine, Huwendiek Sören, Seidl Christian, Hana Anisa, Theiler Lorenz, Greif Robert
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Bern University Hospital, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Management, Sinai Health System, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Front Cardiovasc Med. 2022 Jul 15;9:840114. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2022.840114. eCollection 2022.
Human factors are essential for high-quality resuscitation team collaboration and are, therefore, taught in international advanced life support courses, but their assessment differs widely. In Europe, the summative life support course assessment tests mainly adhere to guidelines but few human factors. This randomized controlled simulation trial investigated instructors' and course participants' perceptions of human factors assessment after two different summative assessments.
All 5th/6th-year medical students who attended 19 advanced life support courses according to the 2015 European Resuscitation Council guidelines during one study year were invited to participate. Each course was randomized to either: (1) Simulated team assessment (one instructor simulates a team, and the assessed person leads this "team" through a cardiac-arrest scenario test); (2) Real team assessment (4 students form a team, one of them is assessed as the team leader; team members are not assessed and act only on team leader's commands). After the summative assessments, instructors, and students rated the tests' ability to assess human factors using a visual analog scale (VAS, 0 = no agreement, 10 = total agreement).
A total of 227 students participated in the 1-day Immediate Life Support courses, 196 students in the 2-day Advanced Life Support courses, additionally 54 instructors were included. Instructors judged all human factors significantly better in real team assessments; students rated leadership and situational awareness comparable between both assessments. Assessment pass rates were comparable between groups.
Summative assessment in real teams was perceived significantly better to assess human factors. These results might influence current summative assessment practices in advanced life support courses.
人为因素对于高质量的复苏团队协作至关重要,因此在国际高级生命支持课程中有所讲授,但对其评估差异很大。在欧洲,总结性生命支持课程评估测试主要遵循指南,但涉及人为因素的较少。这项随机对照模拟试验调查了两种不同总结性评估后教员和课程参与者对人为因素评估的看法。
邀请了在一个研究年度内按照2015年欧洲复苏委员会指南参加19门高级生命支持课程的所有五/六年级医学生参与。每门课程被随机分为:(1)模拟团队评估(一名教员模拟一个团队,被评估者带领这个“团队”通过心脏骤停情景测试);(2)真实团队评估(4名学生组成一个团队,其中一人被评估为团队领导者;团队成员不被评估,仅根据团队领导者的指令行动)。在总结性评估后,教员和学生使用视觉模拟量表(VAS,0 = 不同意,10 = 完全同意)对测试评估人为因素的能力进行评分。
共有227名学生参加了为期1天的即时生命支持课程,196名学生参加了为期2天的高级生命支持课程,另外包括54名教员。教员认为在真实团队评估中所有人为因素都明显更好;学生认为两种评估中领导力和情境意识相当。两组之间的评估通过率相当。
真实团队中的总结性评估在评估人为因素方面被认为明显更好。这些结果可能会影响当前高级生命支持课程中的总结性评估实践。