Method for Teaching Life-Saving Combat First-Aid Skills With live-actor Patients Using a Wearable Training Apparatus

被引:3
作者
Lv, Minrui [1 ]
Jia, Yijun [1 ]
Zong, Zhaowen [1 ]
Jiang, Renqing [1 ]
Du, Wenqiong [1 ]
Zhang, Lin [1 ]
Ye, Zhao [1 ]
Zhong, Xin [1 ]
机构
[1] Army Med Univ, Dept Combat Casualty Care Training, State Key Lab Trauma Burn & Combined Injury, Training Base Army Hlth Care, Chongqing 400038, Peoples R China
关键词
SIMULATION; CARE; EDUCATION; REALITY; FORCES; AIRWAY; DEATH;
D O I
10.1093/milmed/usab286
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Introduction Training combat personnel in combat first-aid skills has faced many challenges over time, such as the need to combine tactics with medicine and to overcome combat personnel's lack of medical background knowledge. Therefore, many simulation methods are currently being developed, each of which has its advantages and disadvantages. In this study, a combined simulation method involving live-actor patients using a wearable training apparatus was developed, and the effects of this method were observed. Materials and Methods Focusing on the major causes of preventable deaths among victims killed in action, wearable training apparatuses simulating massive hemorrhage, airway obstruction, and tension pneumothorax were designed and produced. Methods of simulating these three injury types using live-actor patients with these training apparatuses were developed, and medical teachers evaluated the simulation effects. The live-actor patients were incorporated into a tactical scenario to train and test nonmedical and medical students in year 3, respectively. High-fidelity simulator-based training and traditional training without simulation served as the control. A post-training survey using a 7-point Likert scale evaluated the trainees' feelings toward these training approaches. Results Three types of training apparatuses were developed to simulate three life-threatening injuries, and the simulation effects of the live-actor patients using these apparatuses were highly recognized by medical teachers. Both live-actor patients and high-fidelity simulator-based training improved performance significantly more than traditional training. However, the improvement due to training with live-actor patients was greater than that due to high-fidelity simulator-based training for nonmedical students, whereas there was no difference between these two simulation methods for medical students. A post-training survey revealed that all the trainees were confident in practicing first-aid skills after training, and they all agreed that live-actor patients could combine tactical situations with first aid better than high-fidelity simulators. The nonmedical students strongly agreed that live-actor patients were more helpful in the training of injury evaluation than high-fidelity simulators. Conclusions The method using wearable training apparatus-based live-actor patients was satisfying and effective for teaching life-saving combat first-aid skills, especially for nonmedical students.
引用
收藏
页码:757 / 763
页数:7
相关论文
共 32 条
[1]   Augmentation of point of injury care: Reducing battlefield mortality-The IDF experience [J].
Avi, Benov ;
Elon, Glassberg ;
Baruch, Erez Nissim ;
Avi, Shina ;
Gilad, Twig ;
Moran, Levi ;
Itay, Zoarets ;
Rama, Sagi ;
Tarif, Bader ;
David, Dagan ;
Avraham, Yitzhak ;
Yitshak, Kreiss .
INJURY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE CARE OF THE INJURED, 2016, 47 (05) :993-1000
[2]   Role I trauma experience of the Israeli Defense Forces on the Syrian border [J].
Benov, Avi ;
Glassberg, Elon ;
Nadler, Roy ;
Gendler, Sami ;
Erlich, Tomer ;
Bader, Tarif ;
Rasmussen, Todd E. ;
Kreiss, Yitshak .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA AND ACUTE CARE SURGERY, 2014, 77 :S71-S76
[3]   Prehospital airway procedures performed in trauma patients by ground forces in Afghanistan [J].
Blackburn, Megan B. ;
April, Michael D. ;
Brown, Derek J. ;
DeLorenzo, Robert A. ;
Ryan, Kathy L. ;
Blackburn, August N. ;
Schauer, Steven G. .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA AND ACUTE CARE SURGERY, 2018, 85 :S154-S160
[4]  
Butler FK., 2018, J SPEC OPER MED PEER, V18, P19, DOI DOI 10.55460/XB1Z-3BJU
[5]   Tactical Combat Casualty Care: Beginnings [J].
Butler, Frank K., Jr. .
WILDERNESS & ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2017, 28 (02) :S12-S17
[6]   Battlefield trauma care then and now: A decade of Tactical Combat Casualty Care [J].
Butler, Frank K., Jr. ;
Blackbourne, Lorne H. .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA AND ACUTE CARE SURGERY, 2012, 73 :S395-S402
[7]  
da Luz Luis Teodoro, 2015, Can J Surg, V58, pS125
[8]   Death on the battlefield (2001-2011): Implications for the future of combat casualty care [J].
Eastridge, Brian J. ;
Mabry, Robert L. ;
Seguin, Peter ;
Cantrell, Joyce ;
Tops, Terrill ;
Uribe, Paul ;
Mallett, Olga ;
Zubko, Tamara ;
Oetjen-Gerdes, Lynne ;
Rasmussen, Todd E. ;
Butler, Frank K. ;
Kotwal, Russell S. ;
Holcomb, John B. ;
Wade, Charles ;
Champion, Howard ;
Lawnick, Mimi ;
Moores, Leon ;
Blackbourne, Lorne H. .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA AND ACUTE CARE SURGERY, 2012, 73 :S431-S437
[9]   Simulation in a Disaster Drill: Comparison of High-fidelity Simulators versus Trained Actors [J].
Gillett, Brian ;
Peckler, Brad ;
Sinert, Richard ;
Onkst, Cherie ;
Nabors, Spencer ;
Issley, Steven ;
Maguire, Christopher ;
Galwankarm, Sagar ;
Arquilla, Bonnie .
ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2008, 15 (11) :1144-1151
[10]   Systematic Review of Live Tissue Versus Simulation Education for Prehospital Trauma Providers [J].
Goolsby, Craig ;
Branting, Andrew ;
Ausman, Jason ;
Williams, David ;
Ausman, Chelsea ;
David, Jason ;
Allard, Rhonda .
MILITARY MEDICINE, 2017, 182 (9-10) :E1824-E1833