Knisely Benjamin M, Gaudaen James C, Smith Andrew V, Perta Julie M, Pamplin Jeremy C, Quinn Matthew T, Schmidt Patricia M
Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center, United States Army Medical Research and Development Command, Fort Detrick, MD 21702, USA.
MedStar Montgomery Medical Center, Olney, MD 20832, USA.
Mil Med. 2023 Jul 22;188(7-8):e1664-e1672. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usac250.
Combat medics are required to perform highly technical medical procedures in austere environments with minimal error. Effective means to quantify medic performance in field and simulated environments are critical to optimize medic training procedures as well as to evaluate the influence of medical equipment and other supportive technologies on medic performance. Human performance evaluation in combat casualty care presents many unique challenges due to the unique environment (battlefields) and population (medics) that must be represented. Recent advances in simulation and measurement technology have presented opportunities to improve simulation fidelity and measurement quality; however, it is currently unclear to what extent these advances have been adopted in this domain.
In this work, a scoping review of recent (2011-2021) prospective research on Army medic (68 W and Special Operations) performance is presented. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews guidelines served as the framework for the review. The goal of this work was to summarize recent trends and practices and to illuminate opportunities for future work. Two human factors experts performed an exhaustive review of relevant, peer-reviewed literature and systematically identified articles for inclusion in the final analysis. The articles were examined in detail, and data elements of interest were extracted.
Forty-eight articles were identified based on the defined inclusion criteria. Thirty three of the articles focused on technological evaluation, 25 focused on medic training procedures, and 5 focused on evaluating medical techniques. Study contributions were predominantly related to medic training materials/procedures and simulator technology. Supportive medical technologies, including telemedical systems, hemorrhage control devices, and ultrasound devices, also received significant attention. Timing was the most common metric used to quantify medic performance, followed by skill pass/fail ratings. There was a notable lack of neurophysiological data used to examine medic physical/cognitive workload during procedures, a growing practice in many other related domains. The most commonly simulated procedures were hemorrhage control, airway management, and thoracostomy. Notable limitations cited across articles were insufficient simulation fidelity, inadequate sample size or sample representativeness, and poor study design.
This work provided a summary of recent peer-reviewed research related to medic simulation and training, and performance evaluation. This article should be used to contextualize existing research and inspire new research questions. Expanding and advancing research on medic simulation and training will help to ensure optimal casualty care at the front lines.
战斗医护人员需要在艰苦环境中以最小的误差执行高技术含量的医疗程序。在野外和模拟环境中量化医护人员表现的有效方法对于优化医护人员培训程序以及评估医疗设备和其他支持技术对医护人员表现的影响至关重要。由于必须模拟独特的环境(战场)和人群(医护人员),战斗伤亡护理中的人员表现评估存在许多独特挑战。模拟和测量技术的最新进展为提高模拟逼真度和测量质量提供了机会;然而,目前尚不清楚这些进展在该领域的采用程度。
在这项工作中,对最近(2011 - 2021年)关于陆军医护人员(68W和特种作战)表现的前瞻性研究进行了范围综述。系统评价和元分析扩展的首选报告项目用于范围综述的指南作为综述的框架。这项工作的目标是总结最近的趋势和实践,并阐明未来工作的机会。两位人为因素专家对相关的同行评审文献进行了详尽的综述,并系统地确定纳入最终分析的文章。对文章进行了详细审查,并提取了感兴趣的数据元素。
根据定义的纳入标准确定了48篇文章。其中33篇文章侧重于技术评估,25篇侧重于医护人员培训程序,5篇侧重于评估医疗技术。研究贡献主要与医护人员培训材料/程序和模拟器技术有关。支持性医疗技术,包括远程医疗系统、出血控制设备和超声设备,也受到了极大关注。时间是用于量化医护人员表现的最常见指标,其次是技能通过/失败评级。在许多其他相关领域越来越普遍的做法是,在程序中用于检查医护人员身体/认知工作量的神经生理数据明显缺乏。最常模拟的程序是出血控制、气道管理和胸廓造口术。各文章中提到的显著局限性包括模拟逼真度不足、样本量或样本代表性不足以及研究设计不佳。
这项工作提供了与医护人员模拟、培训和表现评估相关的最近同行评审研究的总结。本文应用于将现有研究置于背景中并激发新的研究问题。扩大和推进医护人员模拟和培训的研究将有助于确保前线的最佳伤亡护理。