In Situ, Multidisciplinary, Simulation-Based Teamwork Training Improves Early Trauma Care

被引:211
|
作者
Steinemann, Susan [1 ]
Berg, Benjamin [2 ]
Skinner, Alisha [3 ]
DiTulio, Alexandra [3 ]
Anzelon, Kathleen
Terada, Kara
Oliver, Catherine
Hao Chih Ho
Speck, Cora
机构
[1] Univ Hawaii, Dept Surg, Queens Med Ctr, Honolulu, HI 96813 USA
[2] Univ Hawaii, Telehlth Res Inst, Honolulu, HI 96813 USA
[3] John A Burns Sch Med, Honolulu, HI USA
关键词
team training; trauma; simulation; NOTECHS; HUMAN PATIENT SIMULATOR; RESUSCITATION; PERFORMANCE; EDUCATION; DEATHS; SKILLS; SCALE; TIME;
D O I
10.1016/j.jsurg.2011.05.009
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the impact of a team training curriculum for residents and multidisciplinary trauma team members on team communication, coordination and clinical efficacy of rrauma resuscitation. DESIGN: Prospective, cohort intervention comparing pre- vs. post-training performance. The intervention was a human patient simulator (HPS)-based, in situ team training curriculum, comprising a one-hour web based didactic followed by HPS training in the emergency department (ED). Teams were trained in multidisciplinary groups of 5-8 persons. Each HPS session included three fifteen minute scenarios with immediate video-enabled debriefing. Structured debriefing and teamwork assessment was performed with a modified NOTECHS scale for trauma (T-NOTECHS). Teams were assessed for performance changes during HPS-based training, as well as in actual trauma resuscitations. SETTING: The Queen's Trauma Center (Level II); the primary teaching hospital for the University of Hawaii Surgical Residency. PARTICIPANTS: 137 multidisciplinary trauma team members, including residents (n = 24), ED and trauma attending physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, and ED technicians. RESULTS: During HPS-based training sessions, significant improvements in teamwork ratings, and in clinical task speed and completion rates were noted between the first and the last scenario.244 real-life blunt trauma resuscitations were observed for six months before and after training. There was a significant improvement in mean teamwork scores from the pre-to post-training resuscitations. Moreover, there were significant improvements in the objective parameters of speed and completeness of resuscitation. This was manifest by a 76% increase in the frequency of near-perfect task completion (<= 1 unreported task), and a reduction in the mean overall ED resuscitation time by 16%. CONCLUSIONS: A relatively brief (four-hour) HPS-based curriculum can improve the teamwork and clinical performance of multidisciplinary trauma teams that include surgical residents. This improvement was evidenced both in simulated and actual trauma settings, and across teams of varying composition. HPS-based trauma teamwork training appears to be an educational method that can impact patient care. (J Surg 68:472-477. (C) 2011 Association of Program Directors in Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
引用
收藏
页码:472 / 477
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Improving Teamwork, Confidence, and Collaboration Among Members of a Pediatric Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit Multidisciplinary Team Using Simulation-Based Team Training
    Mayte I. Figueroa
    Robert Sepanski
    Steven P. Goldberg
    Samir Shah
    Pediatric Cardiology, 2013, 34 : 612 - 619
  • [22] Simulation-based training improves process times in acute stroke care (STREAM)
    Bohmann, Ferdinand O.
    Gruber, Katharina
    Kurka, Natalia
    Willems, Laurent M.
    Herrmann, Eva
    du Mesnil de Rochemont, Richard
    Scholz, Peter
    Rai, Heike
    Zickler, Philipp
    Ertl, Michael
    Berlis, Ansgar
    Poli, Sven
    Mengel, Annerose
    Ringleb, Peter
    Nagel, Simon
    Pfaff, Johannes
    Wollenweber, Frank A.
    Kellert, Lars
    Herzberg, Moriz
    Koehler, Luzie
    Haeusler, Karl Georg
    Alegiani, Anna
    Schubert, Charlotte
    Brekenfeld, Caspar
    Doppler, Christopher E. J.
    Onur, Ozgur A.
    Kabbasch, Christoph
    Manser, Tanja
    Steinmetz, Helmuth
    Pfeilschifter, Waltraud
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 2022, 29 (01) : 138 - 148
  • [23] Debriefing 101: training faculty to promote learning in simulation-based training
    Paige, John T.
    Arora, Sonal
    Fernandez, Gladys
    Seymour, Neal
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2015, 209 (01) : 126 - 131
  • [24] An appropriate simulation-based training for surgical technology students
    Gholinejadzirmanlou, Mahsa
    Attari, Ahmad Mirza Aghazadeh
    Sheikhalipour, Zahra
    Lotfi, Mojgan
    Ghaffarifar, Saeideh
    Qayumi, Karim
    NURSE EDUCATION IN PRACTICE, 2023, 70
  • [25] The Golden Opportunity: Multidisciplinary Simulation Training Improves Trauma Team Efficiency
    Long, Andrea M.
    Lefebvre, Cedric M.
    Masneri, David A.
    Mowery, Nathan T.
    Chang, Michael C.
    Johnson, James E.
    Carter, Jeffrey E.
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL EDUCATION, 2019, 76 (04) : 1116 - 1121
  • [26] The Influence of Culture on Teamwork and Communication in a Simulation-Based Resuscitation Training at a Community Hospital in Honduras
    Perry, Madeline F.
    Seto, Teresa L.
    Carlos Vasquez, Juan
    Josyula, Srirama
    Rule, Amy R. L.
    Rule, David W.
    Kamath-Rayne, Beena D.
    SIMULATION IN HEALTHCARE-JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY FOR SIMULATION IN HEALTHCARE, 2018, 13 (05): : 363 - 370
  • [27] Facilitators and barriers to the clinical application of teamwork skills taught in multidisciplinary simulated Trauma Team Training
    Murphy, Margaret
    Curtis, Kate
    McCloughen, Andrea
    INJURY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE CARE OF THE INJURED, 2019, 50 (05): : 1147 - 1152
  • [28] Simulation-Based Team Training Improves Team Performance among Pediatric Intensive Care Unit Staff
    Colman, Nora
    Figueroa, Janet
    McCracken, Courtney
    Hebbar, Kiran
    JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE, 2019, 8 (02) : 83 - 91
  • [29] Simulation-based training in critical resuscitation procedures improves residents' competence
    Langhan, Trevor S.
    Rigby, Ian J.
    Walker, Ian W.
    Howes, Daniel
    Donnon, Tyrone
    Lord, Jason A.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2009, 11 (06) : 535 - 539
  • [30] Simulation-based training for thoracoscopic lobectomy: a randomized controlled trial
    Jensen, Katrine
    Ringsted, Charlotte
    Hansen, Henrik Jessen
    Petersen, Rene Horsleben
    Konge, Lars
    SURGICAL ENDOSCOPY AND OTHER INTERVENTIONAL TECHNIQUES, 2014, 28 (06): : 1821 - 1829