A model of cardiopulmonary bypass staged training integrating technical and non-technical skills dedicated to cardiac trainees
Autor: | F Doguet, Adam Dubrowski, A Kotsakis, V Fouilloux, S Berdah |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Male
Wilcoxon signed-rank test media_common.quotation_subject Fidelity law.invention law Cardiopulmonary bypass Animals Humans Medicine Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Technical skills Set (psychology) Curriculum media_common Advanced and Specialized Nursing Medical education Cardiopulmonary Bypass Sheep business.industry Problem-Based Learning General Medicine Test (assessment) Critical thinking Education Medical Continuing Female Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business Safety Research |
Zdroj: | Perfusion. 30:132-139 |
ISSN: | 1477-111X 0267-6591 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0267659114534287 |
Popis: | Objectives: To develop a standardized simulation-based curriculum to teach medical knowledge and technical, communication and critical thinking skills necessary to initiate and wean from cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) to junior cardiac trainees (CTs) in France. Performance on post-curricular tests was compared between CTs who participated in the new curriculum to those who did not. Methods: The simulation-based curriculum was developed by content and education experts. Simulations sequentially taught the skills necessary for initiating and weaning from CPB as well as managing crises by adding fidelity and complexity to scenarios. Nine CTs were randomly assigned to the new curriculum (n=5) or the traditional curriculum (n=4). Skills were assessed using tests of medical knowledge and technical, communication (GRS) and critical thinking (SCT) skills. A two-sample Wilcoxon rank-sum test compared average scores between the two groups. Alpha of 0.05 was set to indicate statistically significant differences. Results: The resutls revealed that CTs in the new curriculum significantly outperformed CTs in the traditional curriculum on technical (18.2 vs 14.8, p=0.05) and communication (3.5 vs 2.2, p=0.013) skills. There was no significant difference between CTs in the new curriculum in the Script Concordance Test (16.5 vs 14.8, p=0.141) and knowledge tests (26.9 vs 24.6, p=0.14) compared to CTs in the traditional curriculum. Conclusion: Our new curriculum teaches communication and technical skills necessary for CPB. The results of this pilot study are encouraging and relevant. They give grounds for future research with a larger panel of trainees. Based on the current distribution of scores, a sample size of 12 CTs per group should yield significant results for all tests. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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