Effectiveness of a virtual reality trainer for retention of tourniquet application skills for hemorrhage control among emergency medicine residents

Author:

Saggar Vinay12ORCID,O'Donnell Philip3,Moss Hillary45,Yoon Andrew45,Lutz Carlo45,Restivo Andrew46,Ahmed Oark47,Guha Debayan47,Jafri Farrukh8,Singh Maninder47ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Columbia Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons New York New York USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine NewYork‐Presbyterian/Columbia Medical Center Brooklyn New York USA

3. Department of Emergency Medicine NewYork‐Presbyterian Brookyln Methodist Hospital Brooklyn New York USA

4. Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx New York USA

5. Moses Division, Department of Emergency Medicine Montefiore Medical Center New York New York USA

6. Weiler Division, Department of Emergency Medicine Montefiore Medical Center New York New York USA

7. Department of Emergency Medicine, Jacobi Medical Center NYC Health + Hospitals Bronx New York USA

8. Department of Emergency Medicine White Plains Hospital White Plains New York USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundWith a rise in mass casualty incidents, training in hemorrhage control using tourniquets has been championed as a basic—and lifesaving—procedure for bystanders and medical professionals alike. The current standard for training is in‐person (IP) courses, which can be limited based on instructor availability. Virtual reality (VR) has demonstrated the potential to improve the accuracy of certain medical tasks but has not yet been developed for hemorrhage control. The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of a VR hemorrhage trainer in learner retention of tourniquet application when compared to traditional IP instructor teaching among a cohort of emergency medicine residents practicing in a Level I trauma center.MethodsThis was a prospective, observational study of 53 emergency medicine residents at an inner‐city program. Participants were randomly assigned to either the control or the VR group. On Day 0, all residents underwent a training session (IP vs. VR) for the proper, stepwise application of a tourniquet, as defined by the American College of Trauma Surgeons. Each participant was then assessed on the application of a tourniquet by a blinded instructor using the National Registry Hemorrhage Control Skills Lab rubric. After 3 months, each resident was reevaluated on the same rubric, with subsequent data analysis on successful tourniquet placement (measured as under 90 s) and time to completion.ResultsOf the 53 participants, the IP training group had an initial pass rate of 97% (28/29) compared to 92% (22/24) in the VR group (p = 0.58). On retention testing, the IP training group had a pass rate of 95% (20/21) compared to 90% (18/20) in the VR group (p = 0.62). Stratifying the success of tourniquet placement by level of resident training did not demonstrate any statistically significant differences.ConclusionsIn this pilot study of emergency medicine residents, we found no significant differences in successful hemorrhage control by tourniquet placement between those trained with VR compared to a traditional IP course among emergency medicine residents. While more studies with greater power are needed, the results suggest that VR may be a useful adjunct to traditional IP medical training.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference15 articles.

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2. Increasing Trauma Deaths in the United States

3. Using Tourniquets to Stop Bleeding

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