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1.
Mil Med ; 2024 Apr 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38651572

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Surgical cricothyroidotomy (SC) is a vital skill that combat first responders must master as airway obstruction is the third most preventable cause of death on the battlefield. Degradation of skills over time is a known problem, and there is inadequate knowledge regarding the rate of SC skill retention. Our prior study showed that simulation-based mastery learning was effective in training 89 novices how to reliably perform an en route SC to mastery performance standards. This study aims to assess the durability of this skill by bringing participants back in 3 separate cohorts at 6, 12, or 24 months following the initial training to perform SC in the same test environment. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This was a randomized prospective trial. Random cohorts of equal subjects who previously underwent SC simulation-based mastery learning training were selected to return at 6, 12, and 24 months to retest in the same en route medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) helicopter scenario. A total of 22, 14, and 10 subjects returned at 6, 12, and 24 months, respectively, due to Coronavirus-19 impacts and travel limitations. Participants in the 24-month cohort received a refresher training prior to retesting. All attempts were recorded and blindly graded using the same 10 item standardized SC checklist used in initial training. Our previous work found that mastery criteria for performing a SC were ≤40 seconds and completion of 9/10 items on the checklist. Outcome measures in this study were time to complete the procedure and percent of subjects who completed at least 9/10 items on the SC checklist. RESULTS: There was an increase in time required to complete the procedure compared to initial training in all three retesting cohorts (initial: median 27.50, interquartile range 25.38-31.07 seconds; 6 months: median 36.33, interquartile range 31.59-55.22 seconds; 12 months: median 49.50, interquartile range 41.75-60.75 seconds; 24 months: median 38.79, interquartile range 30.20-53.08 seconds; P < .0001, P < .0001, P = .0039). There was a decline in median value checklist scores compared to initial training in the 6- and 12-month retesting cohorts (initial: median 10.00/10, interquartile range 9.50-10.00; 6 months: median 8.00/10, interquartile range 6.75-9.00; 12 months: median 8.00/10, interquartile range 6.75-9.25; P < .0001, P < .001). There was no difference in median checklist scores between the initial and 24-month retesting scenario (initial: median 10.00/10, interquartile range 9.50-10.00; 24 months: 10.00/10, interquartile range 9.00-10.00; P= .125). There was a decrease in retention of skills as only 31.82% of subjects at 6 months and 14.29% at 12 months met the defined passing criteria of time to completion of ≤40 seconds and checklist score of ≥9/10. A brief refresher course several months prior to the 24-month cohort retesting greatly increased the retention of SC procedural skills, with 60% of subjects meeting the time and checklist criteria. CONCLUSIONS: This study showed that the skill required to perform a SC after initial mastery training does decay significantly. A brief refresher course can help increase retention of skills. Based on our findings SC skills should be refreshed at a minimum of every 6 months to assure optimal proficiency.

2.
Mil Med ; 188(Suppl 6): 328-333, 2023 11 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37948268

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Orbital compartment syndrome (OCS) is an ocular emergency requiring prompt decompression with a lateral canthotomy and cantholysis (LCC) within 2 hours. This study evaluates the feasibility and effectiveness of a standardized LCC curriculum to train medical students to identify and treat OCS. METHODS: This was a prospective, non-randomized, non-comparative cohort study of 39 novice first-year medical students with no prior LCC training who underwent a standardized LCC curriculum incorporating both didactic and hands-on procedural training. Didactic knowledge of orbital anatomy and OCS was evaluated with written pre- and post-knowledge testing. Expert performance criteria were determined by expert consensus based on the performance of three oculoplastic surgeons and were defined as correctly performing all 12 critical checklist steps of an LCC within 3 minutes twice consecutively on a Sonalyst LCC training system eye model. Utilizing the principles of mastery learning, participants learned how to perform an LCC in a classroom environment and were evaluated on a final test of proficiency in a training lane designed to simulate an austere military environment. RESULTS: Participants required a median of 3.0 practice iterations to achieve expert performance in the classroom environment. During the testing phase, all participants correctly identified the eye with OCS, and 77% (n = 30) of learners successfully performed an LCC at the expert level within their first attempt. The median completion time of those who passed on their first testing was 130 seconds. The mean LCC knowledge test scores significantly improved from 48.7% to 71.2% (P < .001). CONCLUSION: This study successfully developed a standardized LCC curriculum utilizing the principles of hands-on mastery learning to train novice learners to perform an LCC efficiently and effectively.


Asunto(s)
Síndromes Compartimentales , Estudiantes de Medicina , Humanos , Estudios Prospectivos , Estudios de Cohortes , Curriculum , Aprendizaje , Síndromes Compartimentales/cirugía , Competencia Clínica
3.
Mil Med ; 188(5-6): e1028-e1035, 2023 05 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34950946

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Airway obstruction is the third most common cause of preventable death on the battlefield, accounting for 1%-2% of total combat fatalities. No previous surgical cricothyroidotomy (SC) studies have analyzed the learning curve required to obtain proficiency despite being studied in numerous other surgical technique training experiments. The aims of this study were to establish expert SC performance criteria, develop a novel standardized SC curriculum, and determine the necessary number of practice iterations required by a novice to reach this pre-determined performance goal. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A standardized checklist and SC performance standards were established based on the performance of 12 board certified Military Health System surgeons with prior experience on performing a SC using a simulated trauma mannequin. Expert-level criteria were defined as a SC time to completion of 40 s or less and checklist score of at least 9/10, including all critical steps. Study subjects included 89 novice providers (54 active-duty first- and second-year medical students and 35 Navy corpsmen). Subjects received instruction on performing a SC using the principles of mastery learning and performed a final test of SC proficiency on a trauma mannequin within a realistic simulated MEDEVAC helicopter. The total number of subject practice attempts, checklist scores, and time to completion were measured and/or blindly scored. Learning curve and exponential plateau equations were used to characterize their improvement in mean time to SC completion and checklist scores. RESULTS: Mean pre-test knowledge scores for the entire group were 11.8 ± 3.1 out of 24 points. Total mean practice learning plateaued at checklist scores of 9.9/10 after 7 iterations and at a mean completion time of 30.4 s after 10 iterations. During the final test performance in the helicopter, 67.4% of subjects achieved expert-level performance on the first attempt. All subjects achieved expert-level performance by the end of two additional attempts. While a significantly larger proportion of medical students (79.9%) successfully completed the helicopter test on the first attempt compared to corpsmen (54.3%), there were no statistically significant differences in mean SC completion times and checklist scores between both groups (P > 0.05). Medical students performed a SC only 1.3 s faster and scored only 0.16 points higher than corpsmen. The effect size for differences were small to negligible (Cohen's d range 0.18-0.33 for SC completion time; Cohen's d range 0.45-0.46 for checklist scores). CONCLUSION: This study successfully defined SC checklist scores and completion times based on the performance of experienced surgeons on a simulator. Using these criteria and the principles of mastery learning, novices with little knowledge and experience in SC were successfully trained to the level of experienced providers. All subjects met performance targets after training and overall performance plateaued after approximately seven iterations. Over two-thirds of subjects achieved the performance target on the first testing attempt in a simulated helicopter environment. Performance was comparable between medical student and corpsmen subgroups. Further research will assess the durability of maintaining SC skills and the timing for introducing refresher courses after initial skill acquisition.


Asunto(s)
Entrenamiento Simulado , Cirujanos , Humanos , Curva de Aprendizaje , Curriculum , Simulación por Computador , Educación de Postgrado en Medicina/métodos , Entrenamiento Simulado/métodos , Competencia Clínica
4.
Fed Pract ; 38(Suppl 3): S40-S45, 2021 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34733094

RESUMEN

A Vietnam War veteran's exposures likely contributed to his cancer diagnoses, but these associations are confounded by his substance use, particularly cigarette smoking.

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