Abstract
Introduction
The aim was to describe changes in the performance of clinical actions,
during repeated in-situ simulations with different cases, by teams of
healthcare professionals with different experiences of the systematic clinical
observation of deteriorating patients, after an introduction to the Airways,
Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Environment/Exposure (ABCDE)
approach.
Methods
A descriptive observational study was conducted of repeated in-situ
simulations using a patient simulator (SimMan 3G), carried out by teams in a
public nursing home (NH, least experienced), an out-of-hours general practice
(OOH-GP) service and a hospital emergency department (ED, most experienced).
The cases had similar clinical presentations but different underlying diagnoses
unknown to the teams. Four blinded clinical experts independently assessed the
simulations on the basis of transcripts, providing comments, an overall score
and scores for the clinical actions.
Results
The assessors commented on the overall lack of a systematic ABCDE approach
in the NH and OOH-GP in all simulations, while the comments for the ED
concerned the choice of treatment. Across the teams, the overall score was
highest in the first simulation and second highest in the third simulation. The
team in the NH received low overall scores for all simulations, but the last
simulation received markedly better scores on the clinical actions. The teams
in the OOH-GP and ED had no such clear pattern in the scores for clinical
actions and thus no indications of improvement with repeated
simulations.
Conclusion
The observation in this study was that the overall assessment by the
blinded assessors showed no consistent improvement in clinical actions from
repeated in-situ simulations, and the teams did not seem to adhere to the ABCDE
approach throughout the simulations. This indicates that the teams were not
able to apply their newly acquired experiences of using the ABCDE approach from
one case to another, different case.
Funder
The Research
Council of Norway
VRI Møre og
Romsdal
Subject
Health Informatics,Education,Modeling and Simulation
Cited by
4 articles.
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