Diango Ken, Mafuta Eric, Wallis Lee A, Cunningham Charmaine, Hodkinson Peter
Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Family, Community and Emergency Care, Groote Schuur Hospital, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Observatory, Cape Town 7925, South Africa.
Kinshasa School of Public Health, University of Kinshasa, Commune Lemba, Kinshasa, DR Congo.
Afr J Emerg Med. 2023 Dec;13(4):258-264. doi: 10.1016/j.afjem.2023.09.001. Epub 2023 Sep 27.
Prehospital care in many low- and middle-income countries is underdeveloped and needs strengthening for improved outcomes. Where formal prehospital care systems are under development, integration of a layperson first responder programme may help improve access for those in need. The World Health Organization recently developed the Community First Aid Responder (CFAR) learning program in support of this system, providing that it may require adaptation to be contextually suitable and sustainably implemented at country level. This study assesses a pilot WHO CFAR course in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, to inform future rollouts and related research.
We conducted a 3-day in-person pilot CFAR training with 42 purposively selected community health workers. Data collection involved quantitative and qualitative phases. The first consisted of structured pre- and post-training surveys, and a course evaluation by participants. The second consisted of two focus group discussions involving purposively selected community health workers in one group, and a convenience sample of course instructors and organisers in the other. Perceptions regarding course content, perceived knowledge acquisition and self-confidence gain were analysed using descriptive statistics for the quantitative data and content analysis for qualitative data.
Course participants were predominantly male (76.3 %) with a median age of 42 years and most (80.5 %) had no prior first aid training. Most were satisfied that the learning objectives were reached, the logistics were adequate, and that the content and teaching language were appropriately tailored to local context. The majority (94.7 %) found the 3-day duration insufficient. There was a significant self-confidence gain regarding first aid skills (average 17.9 % in pre- to 95.3 % in post-training, < 0.001). Favourable opinions on the course structure, content, logistics and teaching methods were noted.
A CFAR course pilot was successfully conducted in Kinshasa. The course is appropriate for context and well received by participants. It can form a key component of developing prehospital care systems in resource-constrained settings.
许多低收入和中等收入国家的院前护理发展不足,需要加强以改善治疗效果。在正式的院前护理系统正在发展的地方,外行人急救员计划的整合可能有助于改善有需要者获得护理的机会。世界卫生组织最近制定了社区急救员(CFAR)学习计划以支持该系统,并指出可能需要进行调整以使其在当地适用并能在国家层面可持续实施。本研究评估了在刚果民主共和国金沙萨开展的世界卫生组织CFAR课程试点,以为未来的推广和相关研究提供参考。
我们对42名经过有目的挑选的社区卫生工作者进行了为期3天的面对面CFAR培训试点。数据收集包括定量和定性阶段。第一阶段包括结构化的培训前和培训后调查,以及参与者对课程的评价。第二阶段包括两次焦点小组讨论,一次是有目的挑选的社区卫生工作者参加,另一次是课程讲师和组织者的便利样本参加。使用定量数据的描述性统计和定性数据的内容分析来分析对课程内容、感知到的知识获取和自信心提升的看法。
课程参与者主要为男性(76.3%),中位年龄为42岁,大多数(80.5%)此前没有接受过急救培训。大多数人对实现学习目标、后勤保障充足以及内容和教学语言适合当地情况感到满意。大多数(94.7%)人认为3天的时长不够。急救技能方面自信心有显著提升(培训前平均为17.9%,培训后为95.3%,<0.001)。对课程结构、内容、后勤和教学方法有积极评价。
在金沙萨成功开展了CFAR课程试点。该课程适合当地情况,受到参与者好评。它可以成为在资源有限环境中发展院前护理系统的关键组成部分。