Fears Related to Blood-Injection-Injury Inhibit Bystanders from Giving First Aid.

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
András N Zsido, Botond Laszlo Kiss, Julia Basler, Bela Birkas
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Prehospital emergency care is vital for saving lives, and increasing bystander involvement can improve survival and recovery. One potential barrier to providing first aid is blood-injury injection (BII) phobia, which affects up to 20% of people, with 3-5% experiencing severe fear. Identifying such barriers may help tailor interventions to encourage willingness to provide first aid.

Methods: We developed and validated the Probability of Giving First-aid Scale (PGFAS), a six-item questionnaire, using the polytomous Rasch Model to assess reliability and validity. The PGFAS was then used to examine how anxiety and disgust-sensitivity related to BII phobia impact the likelihood of providing medical assistance.

Results: Fear of injections and blood draws (β = -0.0987), blood (β = -0.0897) and mutilation (β = -0.1205) significantly reduced the likelihood of giving first aid. However, fear of sharp objects, medical examinations, symptoms of illness, disgust sensitivity, and contamination fear did not have a significant effect.

Conclusion: The Probability of Giving First-aid Scale may serve as a screening tool to identify individuals less likely to provide first aid and could be useful in assessing first-aid training effectiveness. Our findings highlight the importance of preparing first-aid responders and incorporating activities that reinforce helper identity into training programs.

与血液注射损伤相关的恐惧抑制了旁观者的急救行为。
院前急救对挽救生命至关重要,增加旁观者的参与可以改善生存和康复。提供急救的一个潜在障碍是血液损伤注射(BII)恐惧症,它影响了多达20%的人,其中3-5%的人经历过严重的恐惧。确定这些障碍可能有助于调整干预措施,以鼓励提供急救的意愿。方法:采用多分式Rasch模型评估急救概率量表(PGFAS)的信度和效度。然后使用PGFAS来检查与BII恐惧症相关的焦虑和厌恶敏感性如何影响提供医疗援助的可能性。结果:害怕注射和抽血(β = -0.0987)、害怕流血(β = -0.0897)和害怕残害(β = -0.1205)显著降低了急救的可能性。然而,对尖锐物品的恐惧、医学检查、疾病症状、厌恶敏感性和污染恐惧并没有显著影响。结论:给予急救概率量表可作为一种筛选工具,识别不太可能提供急救的个体,并可用于评估急救培训的有效性。我们的研究结果强调了准备急救人员和将强化帮助者身份的活动纳入培训计划的重要性。
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
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.20%
发文量
125
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.
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