A simulation design for research evaluating safety innovations in anaesthesia

被引:23
作者
Merry, A. F. [1 ]
Weller, J. M. [2 ,3 ]
Robinson, B. J. [4 ]
Warman, G. R. [1 ]
Davies, E. [1 ]
Shaw, J. [2 ]
Cheeseman, J. F.
Wilson, L. F. [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Auckland, Dept Anaesthesiol, Auckland 1, New Zealand
[2] Auckland City Hosp, Dept Anaesthesia, Auckland, New Zealand
[3] Univ Auckland, Ctr Med & Hlth Sci Educ, Auckland 1, New Zealand
[4] Wellington Hosp, Natl Patient Simulat Training Ctr, Wellington, New Zealand
[5] Wellington Hosp, Dept Anaesthesia, Wellington, New Zealand
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2044.2008.05638.x
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
It is notoriously difficult to obtain evidence from clinical randomised controlled trials for safety innovations in healthcare. We have developed a research design using simulation for the evaluation of safety initiatives in anaesthesia. We used a standard and a modified scenario in a human-patient simulator, involving a potentially life-threatening problem requiring prompt attention - either a cardiac arrest or a failure in oxygen supply. The modified scenarios involved distractions such as loud music, a demanding and uncooperative surgeon, telephone calls and frequent questions from a medical student. Twenty anaesthetics were administered by 10 anaesthetists. A mean (SD) of 11.3 (2.8) errors per anaesthetic were identified in the oxygen failure scenarios, compared with 8.0 (3.4) in the cardiac arrest scenarios (ANOVA: p = 0.04). The difference between the combined standard scenarios and the combined modified scenarios was not significant. The mean rate of errors overall was 9.7 per simulation, with a pooled SD of 4.46, so in future studies 21 subjects would provide 80% statistical power to show a reduction in error rate of 30% from baseline with p <= 0.05. Our research design will facilitate the evaluation of safety initiatives in anaesthesia.
引用
收藏
页码:1349 / 1357
页数:9
相关论文
共 45 条
[1]   Drug error in anaesthetic practice: a review of 896 reports from the Australian Incident Monitoring Study database [J].
Abeysekera, A ;
Bergman, IJ ;
Kluger, MT ;
Short, TG .
ANAESTHESIA, 2005, 60 (03) :220-227
[2]   Anaesthetic adverse incident reports: An Australian study of 1,231 outcomes [J].
Aders, A ;
Aders, H .
ANAESTHESIA AND INTENSIVE CARE, 2005, 33 (03) :336-344
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2000, To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, DOI DOI 10.17226/9728
[4]   Impact of anesthesia management characteristics on severe morbidity and mortality [J].
Arbous, MS ;
Meursing, AEE ;
van Kleef, JW ;
de Lange, JJ ;
Spoormans, HHAJM ;
Touw, P ;
Werner, FM ;
Grobbee, DE .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 2005, 102 (02) :257-268
[5]  
BERGE JA, 1994, EUR J ANAESTH, V11, P493
[6]   Responses to simulated anaesthetic emergencies by anaesthetists with different durations of clinical experience [J].
Byrne, AJ ;
Jones, JG .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 1997, 78 (05) :553-556
[7]   DOES TRAINING ON AN ANESTHESIA SIMULATOR LEAD TO IMPROVEMENT IN PERFORMANCE [J].
CHOPRA, V ;
GESINK, BJ ;
DEJONG, J ;
BOVILL, JG ;
SPIERDIJK, J ;
BRAND, R .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 1994, 73 (03) :293-297
[8]   AN ANALYSIS OF MAJOR ERRORS AND EQUIPMENT FAILURES IN ANESTHESIA MANAGEMENT - CONSIDERATIONS FOR PREVENTION AND DETECTION [J].
COOPER, JB ;
NEWBOWER, RS ;
KITZ, RJ .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1984, 60 (01) :34-42
[9]   Simulators for use in anaesthesia [J].
Cumin, D. ;
Merry, A. F. .
ANAESTHESIA, 2007, 62 (02) :151-162
[10]   The use of high-fidelity human patient simulation and the introduction of new anesthesia delivery systems [J].
Dalley, P ;
Robinson, B ;
Weller, J ;
Caldwell, C .
ANESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA, 2004, 99 (06) :1737-1741