Rückert Florian, Truxa Victoria, Dussmann Philipp, Schmidt Thomas, Seyfried Timo
Zentrum für Anästhesie, anästhesiologische Intensivmedizin, OP-Management und Schmerztherapie, Klinikum Ernst von Bergmann, Charlottenstraße 72, 14467, Potsdam, Deutschland.
Simulations- und Trainingszentrum Potsdam, Klinikum Ernst von Bergmann, Potsdam, Deutschland.
Anaesthesiologie. 2025 Jan;74(1):15-23. doi: 10.1007/s00101-024-01493-3. Epub 2025 Jan 10.
The electronic cognitive aid for emergencies in anesthesia (eGENA) is an app that offers digital support in anesthesiological emergency situations as a cognitive aid tool via checklists for memory and making decisions. The eGENA was published by the German Society of Anesthesiology and has been implemented in the emergency management of the anesthesiological team of the clinic in Potsdam, Germany.
The primary endpoint was to observe the influence of eGENA on the anesthesiological emergency management on the subjective feeling of assurance as well as on quality of treatment and, therefore, patient safety.
All employees in the anesthesia department (nursing staff and physicians) took part in the initial implementation of eGENA. The implementation phase covered crew resource management (CRM) principles and eGENA use as well as 10 case studies that were discussed with help from eGENA. Afterwards in a randomized controlled simulation study, realistic case studies were processed and evaluated. In this, 18 cases were handled by 9 groups with 4 persons in each group. Treatment during these simulations was assessed using a predetermined 20-point evaluation form and 10 resuscitation-related and 10 case-related points were awarded. Significance tests were carried out using the Wilcoxon-test (significance level p < 0.05) and two evaluations were completed by the attendees at the beginning and the end of the eGENA implementation process.
Scenarios 1 and 2 showed comparable overall scores (14.9 vs. 16.3 points out of 20, not significant). Higher case-associated scores (7.6 vs. 5.6 out of 10, p = 0.03) and higher total scores were achieved with the help of eGENA (16.9 vs. 14.3 out of 20, p = 0.02). Resuscitation-associated scores did not differ significantly (9.3 vs. 8.8 of 10, p = 0.1). During eGENA use for cases the execution of the algorithm-based resuscitation measures was not delayed or accelerated. With eGENA, however, differential diagnoses were discussed significantly more frequently and expanded treatment and diagnostic measures were implemented. During simulation cases eGENA was mainly used by physicians. The initially very positive responses of the evaluations toned down over time. Planned eGENA use for self-study was less frequent (p = 0.006) and there was less approval of the quality of treatment by eGENA than in the first survey (p = 0.002). The cooperation between doctors and nurses in emergency treatment showed an improvement (p < 0.001). The questions about self-assessed safety in emergency treatment on a scale from 0 to 10 showed higher values in all categories at the second survey (except only circulatory emergencies and 'other' emergencies). The respondents were more likely to be involved in emergency treatment at the second time of the survey (p = 0.03) after a median of 20 months.
The sense of security and emergency involvement increased significantly over the observation period. The initial need to use eGENA in everyday life has diminished over time; however, these results cannot be causally associated with eGENA. The use of eGENA does not improve resuscitation efforts but does not delay them either. With the use of eGENA better case-associated results are achieved and advanced diagnostics and treatment are implemented more frequently in complex emergency situations. This increases the quality of treatment. Further studies should be carried out with a larger number of cases to confirm the shown effects.
麻醉紧急情况电子认知辅助工具(eGENA)是一款应用程序,在麻醉紧急情况下通过记忆和决策清单作为认知辅助工具提供数字支持。eGENA由德国麻醉学会发布,并已在德国波茨坦一家诊所的麻醉团队的应急管理中实施。
主要终点是观察eGENA对麻醉应急管理在主观确信感以及治疗质量进而患者安全方面的影响。
麻醉科所有员工(护理人员和医生)参与了eGENA的初始实施。实施阶段涵盖机组资源管理(CRM)原则和eGENA的使用以及10个在eGENA帮助下讨论的案例研究。之后在一项随机对照模拟研究中,对实际案例进行处理和评估。在此研究中,9个小组处理了18个案例,每组4人。使用预先确定的20分评估表对这些模拟过程中的治疗进行评估,并给出10个与复苏相关的分数和10个与案例相关的分数。使用Wilcoxon检验进行显著性检验(显著性水平p < 0.05),参与者在eGENA实施过程开始和结束时完成两次评估。
情景1和情景显示出相当的总分(20分中分别为14.9分和16.3分,无显著性差异)。在eGENA的帮助下,与案例相关的分数更高(10分中分别为7.6分和5.6分,p = 0.03)且总分更高(20分中分别为16.9分和14.3分,p = 0.02)。与复苏相关的分数无显著差异(10分中分别为9.3分和8.8分,p = 0.1)。在将eGENA用于案例时,基于算法的复苏措施的执行未延迟或加速。然而,使用eGENA时,鉴别诊断的讨论显著更频繁,并且实施了扩展的治疗和诊断措施。在模拟案例中,eGENA主要由医生使用。评估最初非常积极,但随着时间推移有所缓和。计划用于自学的eGENA使用频率较低(p = 0.006),并且与第一次调查相比,对eGENA治疗质量的认可程度较低(p = 0.002)。医生和护士在紧急治疗中的合作有所改善(p < 0.001)。在第二次调查中,关于在0至10分范围内自我评估的紧急治疗安全性的问题在所有类别中显示出更高的值(仅循环系统紧急情况和“其他”紧急情况除外)。在中位数为20个月后的第二次调查中,受访者更有可能参与紧急治疗(p = 0.03)。
在观察期内,安全感和参与紧急情况的程度显著增加。随着时间的推移,最初在日常生活中使用eGENA的需求有所减少;然而,这些结果与eGENA没有因果关系。使用eGENA不会改善复苏努力,但也不会延迟复苏。通过使用eGENA,在案例相关方面能取得更好的结果,并且在复杂紧急情况下更频繁地实施先进的诊断和治疗。这提高了治疗质量。应进行更多案例的进一步研究以证实所显示的效果。