March Michelle, Zackoff Matthew, Fleck Jacob, Meisman Andrea, Humphrey Kristen, MacDougall Melinda C, Ehrlich Shelley, Griggs Cornelia, Sacks Chana, Masiakos Peter, Klein Melissa, Real Francis
Division of General and Community Pediatrics (M March, K Humphrey, MC MacDougall, M Klein, and F Real), Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Department of Pediatrics (M Zackoff, J Fleck, S Ehrlich, M Klein, and F Real), University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio; Division of Critical Care Medicine (M Zackoff), Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Acad Pediatr. 2025 Jan-Feb;25(1):102560. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2024.08.005. Epub 2024 Aug 10.
To evaluate the efficacy of Resident Education And Counseling on Household (REACH) Firearm Safety, a novel virtual reality (VR) intervention.
We conducted a single-center, randomized controlled trial among pediatric residents in a Midwestern academic primary care center comparing REACH Firearm Safety with didactic training (intervention) to didactic training alone (control). In the intervention arm, participants practiced firearm safety counseling with virtual characters and received immediate feedback. All residents completed audio-recorded standardized patient (SP) encounters before and after the training as well as a retrospective pre-post survey. Two reviewers, blinded to the allocation arm, used a standardized assessment tool to generate performance scores. Outcomes of interest included the difference between groups in SP performance scores and self-reported confidence.
From March to July 2023, 62% of eligible pediatric residents (n = 47/76) completed the allocated study tasks (intervention 19, control 28). In both groups, SP performance scores and self-reported confidence improved. Compared to the control group, the intervention group demonstrated improvement in sharing information on secure storage devices (P = 0.009) and increased confidence in providing information on secure storage (P = 0.002).
Compared with didactic training alone, a VR intervention using deliberate practice improved residents' skills and confidence related to firearm safety counseling.
评估“居民家庭枪支安全教育与咨询”(REACH)这一新型虚拟现实(VR)干预措施的效果。
我们在中西部一家学术性初级保健中心对儿科住院医师进行了一项单中心随机对照试验,将REACH枪支安全培训(干预组)与单纯的理论培训(对照组)进行比较。在干预组中,参与者与虚拟角色进行枪支安全咨询练习并获得即时反馈。所有住院医师在培训前后均完成了标准化病人(SP)的音频记录问诊以及一项回顾性前后调查。两名对分组情况不知情的评审员使用标准化评估工具得出表现分数。感兴趣的结果包括两组在SP表现分数和自我报告的信心方面的差异。
2023年3月至7月,62%符合条件的儿科住院医师(n = 47/76)完成了分配的研究任务(干预组19人,对照组28人)。两组的SP表现分数和自我报告的信心均有所提高。与对照组相比,干预组在分享安全储存设备信息方面有改善(P = 0.009),在提供安全储存信息方面的信心增强(P = 0.002)。
与单纯的理论培训相比,使用刻意练习的VR干预提高了住院医师与枪支安全咨询相关的技能和信心。