Resumos de Artigos
- Initial Airway Management Skills of Senior Residen
- Bonfils intubation fibrescope
- Acupressure for prevention of pre-op. anxiety
- Awareness in Children
- Obstetrical analgesia with tramadol ?
- Cardiac-Resynchronization Therapy
- Frontal and Occipital Bispectral Index
- Thoracic and Lumbar Epidural Analgesia in Pediatri
- Women Have Same MAC as Men
- Mepivacaine in axillary plexus block
- Anaphylactic reactions in France
- Narcotrend
- Practice Guidelines: Perioperative LMW Heparin
- Quality of Tracheal Intubation
- Dexamethasone prevents PONV
- Posterior Approach to the Sciatic Nerve
- Analgesic Effect: Clonidine and Tizanidine
- Multiple sclerosis in nurse anaesthetists
- Interaction between Propofol and Remifentanil
- Codeine metabolism in children
- Two Techniques of Perioperative Blood Conservation
- Testing for Malignant Hyperthermia Susceptibility
- How Do We Study Toxicity of Spinal Analgesics?
- Effects on coagulation of intravenous crystalloid
- Morphine administration during remifentanil anaest
- Clonidine and agitation after sevoflurane in child
- High inspired oxygen fraction during Cesarean
- New analgesics for neuropathic pain: the lidocaine
- Topical lidocaine patch relieves pain
- Advances in the management of neuropathic pain.
- New Treatments For COPD
- Nausea and vomiting after laparoscopic surgery
- Neuromuscular blockade in infants
- Morphine, Fentanyl, Sufentanil and P-glycoprotein
- Remifentanil and BIS response
- Mortality and Adverse Events After Protamine
- Propofol Sedation in Reperfusion Injury
- Popliteal Nerve Block
- Effects of Clonidine on PONV
- Effect Site Targeted Propofol Infusion In Clinical
- Outcome after off-pump and on-pump in cardiac surg
- Comparison of 0.5% Levobupi or 0.5% Ropivacaine
- Droperidol Inhibits GABAA Receptor
- A comparison of propofol and remifentanil
Initial Airway Management Skills of Senior Residen
Pierre D. Kory et cols

Initial Airway Management Skills of Senior Residents

Initial Airway Management Skills of Senior Residents Simulation Training Compared With Traditional Training Chest - Volume 132, Issue 6 (December 2007)

Background:Scenario-based training (SBT) with a computerized patient simulator (CPS) is effective in teaching physicians to manage high-risk, low-frequency events that are typical of critical care medicine. This study compares the initial airway management skills of a group of senior internal medicine residents trained using SBT with CPS during their first year of postgraduate training (PGY) with a group of senior internal medicine residents trained using the traditional experiential method.

Methods:This was a prospective, controlled trial that compared two groups of PGY3 internal medicine residents at an urban teaching hospital. One group (n =32) received training in initial airway management skills using SBT with CPS in their PGY1 (ie, the simulation-trained [ST]group). The second group (n = 30) received traditional residency training (ie, the traditionally trained [TT]group). Each group was then tested during PGY3 in initial airway management skills using a standardized respiratory arrest scenario.

Results:The ST group performed significantly better than the TT group in 8 of the 11 steps of the respiratory arrest scenario. Notable differences were found in the ability to attach a bag-valve mask (BVM) to high-flow oxygen (ST group, 69%; TT group, 17%; p < 0.001), correct insertion of oral airway (ST group, 88%; TT group, 20%; p < 0.001), and achieving an effective BVM seal (ST group, 97%; TT group, 20%; p < 0.001).

Conclusions:Traditional training consisting of 2 years of clinical experience was not sufficient to achieve proficiency in initial airway management skills, mostly due to inadequate equipment usage. This suggests that SBT with CPS is more effective in training medical residents than the traditional experiential method.

 
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