Chan Natalie Hoi-Man, Merali Hasan S, Mistry Niraj, Kealey Ryan, Campbell Douglas M, Morris Shaun K, Data Santorino
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
Department of Pediatrics, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023 May 8;3(5):e0000705. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000705. eCollection 2023.
Helping Babies Breathe (HBB) is a newborn resuscitation training program designed to reduce neonatal mortality in low- and middle-income countries. However, skills decay after initial training is a significant barrier to sustained impact.
To test whether a mobile app, HBB Prompt, developed with user-centred design, helps improve skills and knowledge retention after HBB training.
HBB Prompt was created during Phase 1 of this study with input from HBB facilitators and providers from Southwestern Uganda recruited from a national HBB provider registry. During Phase 2, healthcare workers (HCWs) in two community hospitals received HBB training. One hospital was randomly assigned as the intervention hospital, where trained HCWs had access to HBB Prompt, and the other served as control without HBB Prompt (NCT03577054). Participants were evaluated using the HBB 2.0 knowledge check and Objective Structured Clinical Exam, version B (OSCE B) immediately before and after training, and 6 months post-training. The primary outcome was difference in OSCE B scores immediately after training and 6 months post-training.
Twenty-nine HCWs were trained in HBB (17 in intervention, 12 in control). At 6 months, 10 HCW were evaluated in intervention and 7 in control. In intervention and control respectively, the median OSCE B scores were: 7 vs. 9 immediately before training, 17 vs. 21 immediately after training, and 12 vs. 13 at 6 months after training. Six months after training, the median difference in OSCE B scores was -3 (IQR -5 to -1) in intervention and -8 (IQR -11 to -6) in control (p = 0.02).
HBB Prompt, a mobile app created by user-centred design, improved retention of HBB skills at 6 months. However, skills decay remained high 6 months after training. Continued adaptation of HBB Prompt may further improve maintenance of HBB skills.
“帮助婴儿呼吸”(HBB)是一项旨在降低低收入和中等收入国家新生儿死亡率的新生儿复苏培训项目。然而,初始培训后技能衰退是持续产生影响的一个重大障碍。
测试一款以用户为中心设计的移动应用程序HBB Prompt是否有助于提高HBB培训后的技能和知识保留率。
在本研究的第一阶段,根据从国家HBB提供者登记处招募的乌干达西南部HBB促进者和提供者的意见创建了HBB Prompt。在第二阶段,两家社区医院的医护人员接受了HBB培训。一家医院被随机指定为干预医院,接受培训的医护人员可以使用HBB Prompt,另一家作为对照医院,不使用HBB Prompt(NCT03577054)。在培训前、培训后立即以及培训后6个月,使用HBB 2.0知识检查和B版客观结构化临床考试(OSCE B)对参与者进行评估。主要结果是培训后立即和培训后6个月OSCE B分数的差异。
29名医护人员接受了HBB培训(17名在干预组,12名在对照组)。6个月时,对干预组的10名医护人员和对照组的7名医护人员进行了评估。在干预组和对照组中,OSCE B分数的中位数分别为:培训前立即为7分对9分,培训后立即为17分对21分,培训后6个月为12分对13分。培训6个月后,干预组OSCE B分数的中位数差异为-3(四分位间距-5至-1),对照组为-8(四分位间距-11至-6)(p = 0.02)。
以用户为中心设计的移动应用程序HBB Prompt在6个月时提高了HBB技能的保留率。然而,培训6个月后技能衰退仍然很高。持续调整HBB Prompt可能会进一步提高HBB技能的维持水平。