The initiative for medical equity and global health (IMEGH) resuscitation training program: A model for resuscitation training courses in Africa

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Eugene Tuyishime , Alain Irakoze , Celestin Seneza , Bernice Fan , Jean Paul Mvukiyehe , Jackson Kwizera , Noah Rosenberg , Faye M Evans
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Abstract

In high-income countries, outcomes following in hospital cardiac arrest have improved over the last two decades due to the introduction of rapid response teams, cardiac arrest teams, and advanced resuscitation training. However, in low-income countries, such as Rwanda, outcomes are still poor. This is due to multiple factors including lack of adequate resuscitation training, few trainers, and lack of equipment.

To address this issue, the Initiative for Medical Equity and Global Health Equity (IMEGH), a training organization founded in 2018 by 5 local anesthesiologists has regularly taught resuscitation courses such as Basic Life Support, Advanced Cardiac Life Support, and Pediatric Advanced Life Support in hospitals throughout Rwanda. The aims of the organization include developing a sustainable model to offer context relevant resuscitation training courses, building a cadre of local instructors to teach on the courses, as well as engaging funding partners to help support the effort. From October 2018 until September 2022, 31 courses were run in 11 hospitals across Rwanda training 1,060 healthcare providers (mainly of non-physician anesthetists, nurses, midwives, and general practitioners). Ongoing challenges include lack of local protocols, inability to tracking resuscitation outcomes, and continued inaccessibility by many healthcare providers. Despite these challenges, the IMEGH program is an example of a successful context-relevant model and has potential to inform the design of resuscitation programs in other similar settings. This article describes the development of the IMEGH program, accomplishments as well as lessons learned, challenges, and next steps for expansion.

医疗公平与全球健康倡议(IMEGH)复苏培训计划:非洲复苏培训课程模式
在高收入国家,由于引入了快速反应小组、心脏骤停小组和高级复苏培训,过去二十年来,医院内心脏骤停的治疗效果有所改善。然而,在卢旺达等低收入国家,治疗效果仍然不佳。这是由多种因素造成的,包括缺乏足够的复苏培训、培训人员少、设备缺乏等。为解决这一问题,2018 年,由 5 名当地麻醉科医生成立的培训组织 "医疗公平与全球健康公平倡议"(IMEGH)定期在卢旺达各地的医院教授复苏课程,如基础生命支持、高级心脏生命支持和儿科高级生命支持。该组织的目标包括开发一种可持续的模式来提供与实际情况相关的复苏培训课程,建立一支当地讲师队伍来教授课程,以及吸引资金合作伙伴来帮助支持这项工作。从 2018 年 10 月到 2022 年 9 月,在卢旺达的 11 家医院开设了 31 门课程,培训了 1 060 名医疗服务提供者(主要是非医师麻醉师、护士、助产士和全科医生)。目前面临的挑战包括缺乏地方协议、无法跟踪复苏结果以及许多医疗服务提供者仍然无法获得培训。尽管存在这些挑战,但 IMEGH 计划仍不失为一个与实际情况相关的成功模式范例,并有可能为其他类似环境中复苏计划的设计提供借鉴。本文介绍了 IMEGH 计划的发展历程、取得的成就、汲取的经验教训、面临的挑战以及下一步的推广计划。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
7.70%
发文量
78
审稿时长
85 days
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