Herriman Rachael, Jani Priti, Patel Nehal, Palama Brett, Elangovan Anu
Pediatric Emergency Medicine Fellow, Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco.
Associate Professor, Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Chicago.
MedEdPORTAL. 2025 Sep 5;21:11544. doi: 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11544. eCollection 2025.
Deterioration of pediatric patients outside the PICU increases morbidity and mortality. Effective communication during rapid response team (RRT) events is essential. Although frameworks like SBAR (Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation) and ABC (Airway, Breathing, Circulation) exist, standardized RRT training for residents remains limited. This educational innovation integrates simulation, peer feedback, and deliberate practice to enhance resident communication, confidence, and handoff skills.
Forty-four (52%) of 84 eligible pediatrics and internal medicine/pediatrics residents participated in a simulation-based module in 2022 prior to their pediatric inpatient rotation; 35 completed full training and surveys. The module included a baseline simulation, targeted instruction, practice scenarios with peer feedback, and a final simulation. Objectives focused on ABC-SBAR use, data synthesis, and increased confidence in leading RRTs. Pre- and postmodule surveys assessed knowledge and confidence. Faculty, who were masked to the participant's identity, measured ABC-SBAR handoff scores using audio recordings; peer evaluators also scored in-person simulations.
ABC-SBAR scores improved significantly (mean 5.1/12 to 9.3/12 pre- to postmodule, < .001), with 32% of participants after training versus 5% before training reporting high confidence in leading a pediatric RRT ( < .001). Residents with no prior RRT experience showed the most significant gains. More than 50% of participants believed the training would improve real-world RRT performance.
This simulation-based module improved structured communication and leadership skills for pediatric RRT events. The approach is scalable and adaptable across training sites to enhance resident preparedness and patient safety.
儿科重症监护病房(PICU)之外的儿科患者病情恶化会增加发病率和死亡率。在快速反应团队(RRT)行动期间进行有效的沟通至关重要。尽管存在诸如SBAR(情况、背景、评估、建议)和ABC(气道、呼吸、循环)等框架,但针对住院医师的标准化RRT培训仍然有限。这项教育创新整合了模拟、同伴反馈和刻意练习,以提高住院医师的沟通能力、信心和交接技能。
84名符合条件的儿科及内科/儿科住院医师中有44名(52%)在2022年进行儿科住院轮转之前参加了基于模拟的模块培训;35名完成了完整培训并参与了调查。该模块包括一次基线模拟、针对性指导、有同伴反馈的实践场景以及一次最终模拟。目标集中在ABC-SBAR的使用、数据综合以及提高主导RRT的信心。模块前后的调查评估了知识和信心。对参与者身份不知情的教员使用录音来测量ABC-SBAR交接分数;同伴评估者也对现场模拟进行评分。
ABC-SBAR分数显著提高(模块前平均为5.1/12,模块后为9.3/12,<0.001);培训后32%的参与者表示对主导儿科RRT有高度信心,而培训前这一比例为5%(<0.001)。之前没有RRT经验的住院医师进步最为显著。超过50%的参与者认为该培训将改善实际的RRT表现。
这个基于模拟的模块提高了儿科RRT行动中的结构化沟通和领导技能。该方法可在各个培训地点进行扩展和调整,以增强住院医师的准备程度和患者安全性。