临床医生对针对院外心脏骤停提供体外心肺复苏服务的障碍和促进因素的经验:定性调查

Jasper Eddison, Oscar Millerchip, Alex Rosenberg, Asher Lewinsohn, James Raitt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在英国,院外心脏骤停(OHCA)患者的存活率仍然很低,只有不到 10% 的患者能够存活到出院。体外心肺复苏(ECPR)是一种发展中的治疗方法,如果能在一小时内开始治疗,可以提高部分患者的存活率。临床医生的观点是开发有效的 OHCA ECPR 系统的关键考虑因素,但他们的观点却很少被探讨。本研究调查了临床医生对建立有效系统的障碍和促进因素的看法,以促进 OHCA 患者的院内 ECPR 转运。2023 年 1 月,泰晤士河谷空中救护中心(TVAA)和 Harefield 医院制定了 ECPR 合作路径,用于运送 OHCA 患者进行院内 ECPR。本研究的作者对两家医院的临床医生进行了调查,希望找出有效实施该计划的明显障碍和积极因素。调查包括有关技术和非技术障碍及促进因素的问题,并对自由文本回复进行了专题分析。14 名院前 TVAA 重症监护医生和 9 名院内临床医生代表不同的角色和经验进行了回复。数据分析揭示了 10 个关键主题和 19 个次主题。院前 TVAA 重症监护临床医生认为,相互关联的主题包括教育计划、集体努力和文化、团队合作、服务间沟通、同期活动和程序清晰度,这些主题是 ECPR 系统的重要障碍或促进因素。从院内临床医生的回答中提炼出的主题被归纳为主要考虑因素,重点是学习和边际收益、标准化和简化协议、培训和模拟;以及培养有效的团队。这项研究从临床经验中发现了几个明确的主题和次主题,在开发和模拟用于 OHCA 的 ECPR 系统时应加以考虑。这些见解可为其他中心今后开发针对 OHCA 的 ECPR 计划提供参考。确定的主要建议包括优先考虑教育和培训(包括定期模拟)、规范 "中转站式 "交接流程、在插管过程中确立明确的角色以及制定标准化协议和选择标准。这项研究还深入探讨了在院前急救领域使用院前重症监护团队进行急救病人抢救的可行性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Clinicians’ experience of barriers and facilitators to care delivery of an extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation service for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a qualitative survey
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) survival in the UK remains overall poor with fewer than 10% of patients surviving to hospital discharge. Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) is a developing therapy option that can improve survival in select patients if treatment begins within an hour. Clinicians' perspectives are a pivotal consideration to the development of effective systems for OHCA ECPR, but they have been infrequently explored. This study investigates clinicians' views on the barriers and facilitators to establishing effective systems to facilitate transport of OHCA patients for in-hospital ECPR. In January 2023, Thames Valley Air Ambulance (TVAA) and Harefield Hospital developed an ECPR partnership pathway for conveyance of OHCA patients for in-hospital ECPR. The authors of this study conducted a survey of clinicians across both services looking to identify clear barriers and positive contributors to the effective implementation of the programme. The survey included questions about technical and non-technical barriers and facilitators, with free-text responses analysed thematically. Responses were received from 14 pre-hospital TVAA critical care and 9 in-hospital clinicians’ representative of various roles and experiences. Data analysis revealed 10 key themes and 19 subthemes. The interconnected themes, identified by pre-hospital TVAA critical care clinicians as important barriers or facilitators in this ECPR system included educational programmes; collectiveness in effort and culture; teamwork; inter-service communication; concurrent activity; and clarity of procedures. Themes from in-hospital clinicians’ responses were distilled into key considerations focusing on learning and marginal gains, standardising and simplifying protocols, training and simulation; and nurturing effective teams. This study identified several clear themes and subthemes from clinical experience that should be considered when developing and modelling an ECPR system for OHCA. These insights may inform future development of ECPR programmes for OHCA in other centres. Key recommendations identified include prioritising education and training (including regular simulations), standardising a ‘pitstop style’ handover process, establishing clear roles during the cannulation process and developing standardised protocols and selection criteria. This study also provides insight into the feasibility of using pre-hospital critical care teams for intra-arrest patient retrieval in the pre-hospital arena.
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