心脏病儿童模拟院内心律失常危急事件核对表。

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS
Pediatric Cardiology Pub Date : 2025-08-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-04 DOI:10.1007/s00246-024-03564-z
Robert Spencer, Anita I Sen, David O Kessler, Kristina Salabay, Tammy Compagnone, Yun Zhang, Tarif A Choudhury
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引用次数: 0

摘要

患有心脏病的儿童发生不稳定心律失常和院内心脏骤停 (IHCA) 的风险增加。临床医生遵守救生护理流程是改善患者预后的重要因素。本研究评估了在继发于不稳定心律失常的模拟急性事件中,危急事件核对表是否能提高救生流程的依从性。一项随机对照试验在一家三级学术儿童医院的心脏科病房进行。每周都会对患有基础心脏病的儿科患者进行不事先通知的模拟心律失常急救。应对者包括儿科和麻醉科住院医师、呼吸治疗师以及床旁注册护士。六个小组被随机分为两组--三组接受检查单(干预组),三组不接受检查单(对照组)。每个小组在为期四周的儿科心脏病学轮转中参加了四个模拟场景。参与者在轮转开始时会收到一个简短的幻灯片演示,其中包括核对表介绍。对模拟情景进行了视频和音频记录,并将有三名或三名以上参与者的模拟情景纳入分析。主要结果是团队遵守救生流程的情况,以完成关键管理步骤的百分比表示。次要结果包括参与者对核对表在识别和处理心律失常方面的实用性的看法。我们使用广义估计方程 (GEE) 模型来评估干预的效果,该模型考虑了组内聚类的因素。我们共进行了 24 次模拟;其中一次模拟因参与者人数不足而被排除。在我们的 GEE 分析中,在有核对表的情况下,81.21%(78.96%,83.47%)的关键步骤得以完成,而在没有核对表的情况下,完成率为 68.06%(59.38%,76.74%)(p = 0.004)。93%的研究参与者表示,他们会在患有潜在心脏病的儿童出现不稳定心律失常时使用核对表。在模拟抢救不稳定型儿科心律失常的过程中,核对表与更好地遵守救生流程有关。这些研究结果支持在涉及有潜在心脏病的儿科患者的模拟抢救中使用特定场景核对表来处理不稳定心律失常。未来的研究应调查核对表在实际的儿科院内急救中是否同样有效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Critical Event Checklists for Simulated In-Hospital Dysrhythmias in Children with Heart Disease.

Children with heart disease are at increased risk of unstable dysrhythmias and in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA). Clinician adherence to lifesaving processes of care is an important contributor to improving patient outcomes. This study evaluated whether critical event checklists improve adherence to lifesaving processes during simulated acute events secondary to unstable dysrhythmias. A randomized controlled trial was conducted in a cardiac ward in a tertiary care, academic children's hospital. Unannounced simulated emergencies involving dysrhythmias in pediatric patients with underlying cardiac disease were conducted weekly. Responders were pediatric and anesthesiology residents, respiratory therapists, and bedside registered nurses. Six teams were randomized into two groups-three received checklists (intervention) and three did not (control). Each team participated in four simulated scenarios over a 4-week pediatric cardiology rotation. Participants received a brief slideshow presentation, which included a checklist orientation, at the start of their rotation. Simulations were video and audio recorded and those with three or more participants were included for analysis. The primary outcome was team adherence to lifesaving processes, expressed as the percentage of completed critical management steps. Secondary outcomes included participant perceptions of the checklist usefulness in identifying and managing dysrhythmias. We used generalized estimating equations (GEE) models, which accounted for clustering within groups, to evaluate the effects of the intervention. A total of 24 simulations were conducted; one of the 24 simulations was excluded due to an insufficient number of participants. In our GEE analysis, 81.21% (78.96%, 83.47%) of critical steps were completed with checklists available versus 68.06% (59.38%, 76.74%) without checklists (p = 0.004). Ninety-three percent of study participants reported that they would use the checklists during an unstable dysrhythmia of a child with underlying cardiac disease. Checklists were associated with improved adherence to lifesaving processes during simulated resuscitations for unstable pediatric dysrhythmias. These findings support the use of scenario specific checklists for the management of unstable dysrhythmias in simulations involving pediatric patients with underlying cardiac disease. Future studies should investigate whether checklists are as effective in actual pediatric in-hospital emergencies.

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来源期刊
Pediatric Cardiology
Pediatric Cardiology 医学-小儿科
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
258
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: The editor of Pediatric Cardiology welcomes original manuscripts concerning all aspects of heart disease in infants, children, and adolescents, including embryology and anatomy, physiology and pharmacology, biochemistry, pathology, genetics, radiology, clinical aspects, investigative cardiology, electrophysiology and echocardiography, and cardiac surgery. Articles which may include original articles, review articles, letters to the editor etc., must be written in English and must be submitted solely to Pediatric Cardiology.
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