Cortegiani Andrea, Ippolito Mariachiara, Abelairas-Gómez Cristian, Nabecker Sabine, Olaussen Alexander, Lauridsen Kasper G, Lin Yiqun, Sawyer Taylor, Yeung Joyce, Lockey Andrew S, Cheng Adam, Greif Robert
Department of Precision Medicine in Medical, Surgical and Critical Care Area (Me.Pre.C.C.), University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy.
Department of Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Emergency, University Hospital Policlinico Paolo Giaccone, Palermo, Italy.
Resusc Plus. 2025 Jan 3;21:100863. doi: 10.1016/j.resplu.2024.100863. eCollection 2025 Jan.
To evaluate the effectiveness of in situ simulation for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training on clinical and educational outcomes.
Randomised controlled trials (RCT) and non-randomised studies evaluating in situ simulation for cardiopulmonary resuscitation CPR training of healthcare workers in any setting compared to traditional training and reporting data on patients' survival, patients' outcomes, clinical performance and teamwork in actual or simulated resuscitation and resources needed were included. PubMed, Embase and Cochrane were searches from inception to October 28th 2024 (PROSPERO CRD42024521780). The assessment of risk of bias was done using RoB2 or ROBINS-I and the certainty of evidence was assessed by the GRADE approach. Meta-analysis was not possible due to significant heterogeneity in setting, interventions, control, and outcome definitions. The evidence was summarised according to the Synthesis Without Meta-Analysis (SwiM) reporting guidelines. No funding has been obtained.
From 1062 records, 10 articles were included after full-text review (4 RCTs, 6 non-randomised). The risk of bias was judged as high or some concerns for RCTs and critical or serious for non-randomised studies. The certainty of evidence was very low for all the evaluated outcomes mainly due to risk of bias, inconsistency and imprecision. Two non-randomised studies reported data on patient survival, while two other non-randomized studies provided data on the review outcome of 'patient outcomes', suggesting a potential benefit of in situ simulation or no difference. Four non-randomised studies reported improving or no difference in clinical performance in actual resuscitation. One study reported improved teamwork in actual resuscitation while another reported no difference. Most included studies reported improved clinical performance, teamwork and CPR skill in simulated resuscitation after in situ simulation training vs. traditional training. No study evaluated the resources needed.
The heterogenous evidence suggests that in situ simulation should be considered as an option for CPR training. The certainty of evidence is very low and cost-benefit balance is uncertain due to lack of data about resource needed.
评估现场模拟心肺复苏(CPR)培训对临床和教育成果的有效性。
纳入在任何环境下对医护人员进行心肺复苏培训的现场模拟与传统培训相比较的随机对照试验(RCT)和非随机研究,这些研究报告了患者生存情况、患者结局、实际或模拟复苏中的临床操作表现、团队协作以及所需资源的数据。检索了PubMed、Embase和Cochrane数据库,检索时间从建库至2024年10月28日(PROSPERO注册号:CRD42024521780)。使用RoB2或ROBINS - I进行偏倚风险评估,并采用GRADE方法评估证据的确定性。由于在研究背景、干预措施、对照和结局定义方面存在显著异质性,无法进行荟萃分析。根据非荟萃分析的综合报告指南(SwiM)对证据进行总结。未获得资金支持。
在1062条记录中,经过全文审查后纳入了10篇文章(4项RCT,6项非随机研究)。RCT的偏倚风险被判定为高或存在一些担忧,非随机研究的偏倚风险则为严重或非常严重。所有评估结局的证据确定性都非常低,主要原因是存在偏倚风险、不一致性和不精确性。两项非随机研究报告了患者生存数据,另外两项非随机研究提供了“患者结局”这一综述结局的数据,表明现场模拟可能有益或无差异。四项非随机研究报告在实际复苏中临床操作表现有所改善或无差异。一项研究报告在实际复苏中团队协作有所改善,另一项研究报告无差异。大多数纳入研究报告称,与传统培训相比,现场模拟培训后在模拟复苏中的临床操作表现、团队协作和心肺复苏技能有所改善。没有研究评估所需资源。
异质性证据表明,现场模拟可被视为心肺复苏培训的一种选择。由于缺乏所需资源的数据,证据确定性非常低,成本效益平衡也不确定。