Stodola Megan, Lantz Megan, Chen Tina, Marelich Alexander, Philip Isaac
Saint Louis University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO.
Saint Louis University Hospital, Department of Emergency Medicine, St. Louis, MO.
J Educ Teach Emerg Med. 2024 Jul 31;9(3):SG63-SG104. doi: 10.21980/J8FH2J. eCollection 2024 Jul.
This small-group workshop is designed for pre-clinical medical students. The workshop can also be offered to other medical students looking to review first aid in the community setting.
First aid training in medical students varies based on each student's previous experience. Because of this, medical students in their pre-clinical years have expressed a desire for further training in first aid.1 While most bystanders in an emergency situation do not have a medical background, medical students have received additional training that can provide the skillset to process and respond to emergency situations in a different capacity. Most medical schools have not adopted a universal curriculum in teaching medical students first aid.2 Incorporating first aid into a medical school curriculum can enhance medical students' confidence in emergent situations and lead to better outcomes for patients requiring immediate on-site care.
The goal of this workshop was to improve the confidence of medical students in handling emergencies in the community with the use of first aid while also giving them a standard approach to emergencies using an airway, breathing, and circulation approach. The curriculum was evaluated through student-perceived self-efficacy and confidence in handling the provided scenarios, performance on relevant multiple choice questions, and general appeal of the first aid sessions. By the end of this workshop, students will be able to define the goals of "first aid" and first responder actions, describe clinical signs and symptoms suggestive of an airway, breathing, or circulation emergency in the setting of selected medical emergencies, and demonstrate immediate care steps in the setting of selected medical emergencies, specifically the Heimlich maneuver on adults and infants, direct pressure, wound packing, tourniquet application for external bleeding, epinephrine auto-injector administration, and the recovery position for obtunded or unconscious patients.
Small group activities were performed with a focus on case-based scenarios combined with hands-on instruction. The four scenarios were choking, seizure, anaphylaxis, and bleeding which were taught by an educator who was either faculty, an emergency medicine resident, or an upper-level medical student. Facilitators were provided an educational handout specific to their station to guide them through the teaching session. A PowerPoint presentation was also provided complete with supporting images and videos to share with the students each session.
Students were asked to complete a pre-test and post-test survey to assess knowledge outcome, self-efficacy in first aid, and overall appeal of the workshop. The multiple-choice knowledge outcome data was scored for percent correct on each question as well as overall performance on questions grouped by content. Students were also asked to provide feedback and comments on their overall experience in the workshop.
Overall, medical students reported increased knowledge and confidence in responding to various first-aid situations. There was overall improvement in pre-test and post-test evaluations. The appeal of the event as a whole and its usefulness was overwhelmingly viewed as positive. Some participants noted they wanted similar workshops with more first-aid topics. Participants also noted they felt better prepared to respond to the various emergencies included in the workshop.
A workshop directed at teaching first aid to medical students increased their confidence and knowledge in responding to various emergencies and can successfully be accomplished through a focused large group didactic session and multiple clinically relevant small group teaching sessions.
First aid, airway, breathing, circulation, medical students, choking, seizures, bleeding, anaphylaxis.
本次小组研讨会是为临床前医学生设计的。该研讨会也可提供给其他希望复习社区环境中急救知识的医学生。
医学生的急救培训因每个学生以前的经历而异。因此,处于临床前阶段的医学生表示希望接受更多急救培训。1虽然大多数紧急情况下的旁观者没有医学背景,但医学生接受过额外培训,能够以不同的能力处理和应对紧急情况。大多数医学院校尚未采用通用课程来教授医学生急救知识。2将急救纳入医学院课程可以增强医学生在紧急情况下的信心,并为需要现场即时护理的患者带来更好的治疗效果。
本次研讨会的目标是提高医学生在社区中使用急救处理紧急情况的信心,同时为他们提供一种使用气道、呼吸和循环方法处理紧急情况的标准方法。通过学生自我感知的处理所提供场景的自我效能感和信心、相关多项选择题的表现以及急救课程的总体吸引力来评估该课程。在本次研讨会结束时,学生将能够定义“急救”和第一响应者行动的目标,描述在选定医疗紧急情况中提示气道、呼吸或循环紧急情况的临床体征和症状,并演示在选定医疗紧急情况中的即时护理步骤,特别是对成人和婴儿的海姆立克急救法、直接压迫止血、伤口包扎、用于外出血的止血带应用、肾上腺素自动注射器给药以及对昏迷或无意识患者的恢复体位。
开展小组活动,重点是基于案例的情景并结合实践指导。四个情景分别是窒息、癫痫发作、过敏反应和出血,由教员、急诊医学住院医师或高年级医学生进行讲解。为每个站点的引导者提供一份特定的教育手册,以指导他们完成教学环节。每次课程还提供了配有辅助图像和视频的PowerPoint演示文稿,供学生观看。
要求学生完成一份课前和课后调查问卷,以评估知识掌握情况、急救自我效能感以及研讨会的总体吸引力。对多项选择题的知识掌握数据进行评分,计算每个问题的正确百分比以及按内容分组的问题的总体表现。还要求学生对他们在研讨会中的总体体验提供反馈和意见。
总体而言,医学生报告称在应对各种急救情况方面知识有所增加且信心增强。课前和课后评估总体上有所改善。整个活动的吸引力及其有用性被压倒性地视为积极的。一些参与者指出,他们希望举办更多急救主题的类似研讨会。参与者还指出,他们感觉自己对应对研讨会中包含的各种紧急情况准备得更好了。
针对医学生的急救教学研讨会增强了他们应对各种紧急情况的信心和知识,并且可以通过集中的大型讲座课程和多个临床相关的小组教学课程成功实现。
急救、气道、呼吸、循环、医学生、窒息、癫痫发作、出血、过敏反应