P79 Prevention of the “airway to heaven”: training for final year medical students on acute airway and tracheostomy management

BackgroundJunior doctors are often the first team members to assess and treat clinically deteriorating patients in hospital. Despite this, many do not feel confident in their ability to manage a patient‘s airway during a cardiac arrest.1 Furthermore, studies demonstrate that junior doctors have insu...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMJ simulation & technology enhanced learning 2017-11, Vol.3 (Suppl 2), p.A78
Hauptverfasser: Htyn, M, Gokhale, O, Stafford, N
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BackgroundJunior doctors are often the first team members to assess and treat clinically deteriorating patients in hospital. Despite this, many do not feel confident in their ability to manage a patient‘s airway during a cardiac arrest.1 Furthermore, studies demonstrate that junior doctors have insufficient airway skills for resuscitation purposes.2 This project aimed to provide airway training to University of X medical students on their final clinical placement at AB Academy preparing to become doctors in August 2017.Methodology30 Final Year medical students were divided into five groups. Each group underwent a training session between 28th February and 15th March 2017. Students completed anonymised pre-course questionnaires (Likert scale and free text boxes) and short written assessments (total mark 20). They received an interactive Airway Management tutorial. Students then rotated in pairs through 3 workshop stations: Basic Airway Manoeuvres, Airway Adjuncts, Supraglottic Airway Devices. A tutorial on emergency management of tracheostomies followed. Formative assessment was incorporated into every stage of the session. Upon starting the post-course test and questionnaire, the students were called to an emergency (a surprise simulation), which included progression to cardiac arrest. Following a debrief session, the questionnaires were completed. The questionnaires underwent thematic analysis. Mean, median and modal scores were calculated for the Likert responses. A paired t-test was utilised for the test scores.ResultsThe mean pre and post-course test scores were 11.5 and 16.4 respectively. There was a statistically significant improvement in the scores (p
ISSN:2056-6697
DOI:10.1136/bmjstel-2017-aspihconf.159