Intensive Care Unit Critical Incident Analysis as an Objective Tool to Select Content for a Simulation Curriculum
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Yartsev, Alex
[1
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Yang, Feibi
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Univ Sydney, Westmead Hosp, Westmead Intens Care Unit, Sydney, Australia
Cnr Hawkesbury Rd & Darcy Rd, Westmead, NSW 2145, AustraliaUniv Sydney, Westmead Hosp, Westmead Intens Care Unit, Sydney, Australia
Yang, Feibi
[1
,2
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[1] Univ Sydney, Westmead Hosp, Westmead Intens Care Unit, Sydney, Australia
IntroductionThe intensive care unit (ICU) offers a unique environment where emergency events are frequent, high-stakes, and carefully documented, which makes it an ideal setting to research the specific technical skills, which are deployed during such events. This study aimed to describe a method of objectively identifying skills and scenarios, which should be prioritized for inclusion in a simulation curriculum.MethodA retrospective audit of all available critical incident data (11 months) from a 36-bed tertiary ICU was performed. Code blue events were analyzed. Data were coded according to a rubric based on Le Guen and Costa-Pinto (Intern Med J. 2020;51(8):1298-1303) tallying the occurrence of common ICU scenarios and skills.Documentation of each event was analyzed. The frequency with which a skill or scenario appeared in these events was considered as "high frequency" if it occurred in more than 20% of the events.The trainees' confidence in a particular skill was assessed by means of a self-assessment survey questionnaire (based on an anchored 6-item rating scale).ResultsOne hundred twenty-one incidents were analyzed. Sixteen were eliminated because of insufficient documentation. The most common skills during these emergency events were familiarity with the advanced life support trolley (34% of events), electrocardiogram (ECG) rhythm strip interpretation (32.4%), and the operation of an external defibrillator (29.5%).Most trainees surveyed are preparing to undergo training in anesthesia (58%) or intensive care (28%). Specialized areas of expertise (troubleshooting an extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) circuit or intra-aortic balloon pump) had the lowest confidence scores (average scores of 0.81 and 0.72).ConclusionsWe highlighted a novel, reproducible, and objective methodology by which critical incident data can be integrated with trainee self-assessment to generate a targeted simulation curriculum.