Integration of in-hospital cardiac arrest contextual curriculum into a basic life support course: a randomized, controlled simulation study

Integration of in-hospital cardiac arrest contextual curriculum into a basic life support course: a randomized, controlled simulation study

Accepted Manuscript Title: Integration of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Contextual Curriculum into a Basic Life Support Course: A Randomized, Controlled ...

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Accepted Manuscript Title: Integration of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Contextual Curriculum into a Basic Life Support Course: A Randomized, Controlled Simulation Study Author: Elizabeth A. Hunt Jordan M. Duval-Arnould Nnenna O. Chime Kareen Jones Michael Rosen Merona Hollingsworth Deborah Aksamit Marida Twilley Cheryl Camacho Daniel P. Nogee Julianna Jung Kristen Nelson-McMillan Nicole Shilkofski Julianne S. Perretta PII: DOI: Reference:

S0300-9572(17)30114-4 http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2017.03.014 RESUS 7106

To appear in:

Resuscitation

Received date: Revised date: Accepted date:

16-10-2016 2-2-2017 10-3-2017

Please cite this article as: Hunt EA, Duval-Arnould JM, Chime NO, Jones K, Rosen M, Hollingsworth M, Aksamit D, Twilley M, Camacho C, Nogee DP, Jung J, Nelson-McMillan K, Shilkofski N, Perretta JS, Integration of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Contextual Curriculum into a Basic Life Support Course: A Randomized, Controlled Simulation Study, Resuscitation (2017), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2017.03.014 This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.

Integration of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Contextual Curriculum into a Basic Life Support Course: A Randomized, Controlled Simulation Study

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Elizabeth A. Hunt, MD, MPH, PhD1-5, Jordan M. Duval-Arnould, MPH, DrPH(c)1,2,4,5, Nnenna O. Chime, MBBS, MPH1,2, Kareen Jones, MD6,7, Michael Rosen, PhD1,2, Merona Hollingsworth, BS8, Deborah Aksamit, BSN, RN9, Marida Twilley, MSN, RNBC9, Cheryl Camacho, BS, NRP5, Daniel P. Nogee, MD1, Julianna Jung, MD1,5,10, Kristen Nelson-McMillan, MD1,2,3,5, Nicole Shilkofski, MD, MEd1,2,3,5, Julianne S. Perretta, MSEd, RRT-NPS, CHSE1,2,5 1

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Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine 3 Department of Pediatrics 4 Division of Health Sciences Informatics 5 Johns Hopkins Medicine Simulation Center, Baltimore, Maryland, USA 6 Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California, USA 7 Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine 8 Montefiore Einstein Center for Innovation in Simulation, Bronx, New York, USA 9 Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland, USA 10 Department of Emergency Medicine

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Corresponding Author: Elizabeth A. Hunt Charlotte Bloomberg Children’s Center Division of Pediatric Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine 1800 Orleans Street Room 6321 Baltimore, MD 21287 Telephone: 410-614-0847 Email: [email protected] (can be published) No reprints will be ordered.

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Fax: 410-614-9878

Source of funding: None Direct Conflicts of Interest: None Financial Disclosures: Drs. Hunt and Shilkofski both have grant funding for unrelated projects from the Laerdal Foundation for Acute Care Medicine. Drs. Hunt and Mr. Duval-Arnould have granting funding for unrelated projects from the Hartwell Foundation. Dr. Hunt, Mr. Duval-Arnould and Ms. Perretta have received reimbursement for travel expenses and honoraria for speaking engagements from the Zoll Medical Corporation, with no restriction on the content and no prior review of slides. Dr. Hunt is a volunteer member of the AHA ECC Science Committee and the AHA Get With The Guidelines – Resuscitation Clinical Working Group. Key words:

cardiac arrest, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, simulation, teamwork, time sensitive, education Manuscript Word Count: 2,999 Abstract Word Count: 250 words This paper includes 3 tables and 2 figures and 6 online appendices.

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Objective: To compare resuscitation performance on simulated in-hospital cardiac

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arrests after traditional American Heart Association (AHA) Healthcare Provider Basic

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Life Support course (TradBLS) versus revised course including in-hospital skills

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(HospBLS).

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Design: Prospective, randomized, controlled curriculum evaluation.

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Setting: Johns Hopkins Medicine Simulation Center.

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Subjects: One hundred twenty-two first year medical students divided into fifty-nine

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teams.

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Intervention: HospBLS course of identical length, containing additional content

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contextual to hospital environments, taught utilizing Rapid Cycle Deliberate Practice

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(RCDP).

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Measurements: The primary outcome measure during simulated cardiac arrest scenarios

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was chest compression fraction (CCF) and secondary outcome measures included metrics

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of high quality resuscitation.

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Main Results:

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Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

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HospBLS teams had larger CCF: (69%(65-74) vs 58%(53-62), p<0.001] and were faster

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than TradBLS at initiating compressions: [median(IQR): 9 seconds(s)(7-12) vs. 22s(17.5-

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30.5), p<0.001].

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In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

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HospBLS teams had larger CCF: [73%(68-75%) vs. 50%(43-54%)), p<0.001) and were

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faster to initiate compressions: [10s(6-11) vs. 36s(27-63), p<0.001]. All teams utilized the

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hospital AED to defibrillate within 180 seconds per AHA guidelines, [HospBLS:

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122s(103-149) vs. TradBLS: 139s(116-172), p=0.09]. HospBLS teams performed more

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hospital-specific maneuvers to optimize compressions, i.e. utilized: CPR button to flatten

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bed: [7/30(23%) vs. 0/29(0%), p=0.006], backboard: [21/30(70%) vs. 5/29(17%),

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p<0.001],

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[28/30(93%) vs. 10/29(34%), p<0.001], connected oxygen appropriately: [26/30(87%) vs.

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1/29(3%), p<0.001] and used oral airway and/or 2-person bagging when traditional bag-

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mask-ventilation unsuccessful: [30/30(100%) vs. 0/29(0%), p<0.001].

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Conclusion: A hospital focused BLS course utilizing RCDP was associated with

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improved performance on hospital-specific quality measures compared to the traditional

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AHA course.

[28/30(93%) vs. 8/29(28%), p<0.001], lowered bedrails:

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stepstool:

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93 Introduction:

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Each year, approximately 200,000 patients in the United States have an in-hospital

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cardiac arrest (IHCA) with attempted resuscitation.1 Girotra reported increase in survival

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to discharge from IHCA between 2000 and 2009 for both adults (13.7% to 22.3%) and

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children (14.3% to 43.4%), with no increase in neurologic disability.2.3 The increasing

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neurologically intact survival rates are encouraging. However, further examination

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reveals significant variation across hospitals in both survival rates and magnitude of

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improvement over time.4,5 Given these reports take into account patient demographics

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and case mix severity, this suggests hospital-level variation contributes to variability in

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patient survival and represents an opportunity to further improve patient outcomes.

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Ornato et al analyzed the American Heart Association’s (AHA) Get-With-The-

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Guidelines-Resuscitation

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resuscitation system errors and survival to discharge.6 For example, GWTG-R defines an

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error for any IHCA with an initial shockable rhythm not defibrillated within 2 minutes, as

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this interval is associated with survival outcomes,6-9 and also varies between hospitals.10

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Other rescuer performance variables associated with cardiac arrest survival include: time

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to initiation of compressions11, pre-, peri- and post-shock pauses,12-14 chest compression

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fraction,15 rate16,17 and depth.17

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(GWTG-R) IHCA registry, reporting an association between

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Historically, AHA Healthcare Provider BLS courses have not taught learners how to

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navigate hospital-specific challenges. For example, a patient who collapses on a hard, flat

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sidewalk requires different strategies than an IHCA in a hospital bed with elevated head,

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bedrails, lying on a soft mattress that deflects downward with compressions. The

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traditional curriculum requires rescuers to perform CPR on the floor with no inclusion of

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other possible environments. The 2015 AHA guidelines now calls for contextualization

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of training scenarios to be relevant to the “learner’s real world setting”.18 Altering the

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manner in which we teach BLS to match the manner in which it most likely to be used by

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our learners may build resiliency and improve resuscitation performance. However, we

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are unaware of literature examining the impact of increasing the level of environmental

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realism during BLS curricula on performance during IHCA.

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We hypothesized students completing a traditional AHA Healthcare Provider BLS

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course would perform well on a simulated OOHCA, but less well when confronted with a

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typical IHCA. Our objectives were to: 1) measure whether learners participating in

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existing AHA Healthcare Provider (TradBLS) courses met key resuscitation outcome

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measures in an IHCA scenario, 2) evaluate learning outcomes of the TradBLS course

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compared to a revised course (HospBLS) amended to include contextually relevant

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curriculum specific to the hospital environment and 3) assess for unintended

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consequences of added hospital content, i.e. worse performance on OOHCA scenarios.

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Materials and Methods:

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Study Design

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A prospective, randomized, controlled evaluation of an educational intervention was

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conducted. The population was first-year medical students at The Johns Hopkins

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University School of Medicine (JHUSOM) who enrolled into one of six sessions most

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convenient for their schedule. Each session had 21 available slots. All were conducted

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over a three-month period. After enrollment was complete, each session was randomized

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to control or intervention. Block randomization in a single block of six, with an opaque

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envelope containing study arm assignments in ratio of 1:1, was utilized to ensure equal

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allocation of subjects with three TradBLS and three HospBLS courses. Participation was

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mandatory as this was a quality assurance exercise to determine which course would

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continue in the JHUSOM curriculum in subsequent years. This project was approved by

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the JHUSOM Institutional Review Board as an Educational Quality Assurance

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evaluation.

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The curricula being compared were both video-guided and instructor-led, i.e. TradBLS

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versus a course of equal length, identical OOHCA content, plus additional objectives and

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curriculum focused on managing IHCA (“HospBLS”). The latter included goals related

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to effective bag-mask-ventilation, use of in-hospital equipment and crisis resource

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management. Both courses utilized the 2010 AHA instructor materials and were

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completed per AHA guidelines.19 After demonstrating to Senior AHA Leadership how

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the revised curriculum met the Healthcare Provider BLS objectives, we were permitted to

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distribute AHA certification cards for our experimental course.

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The additional IHCA-specific objectives were taught using the Rapid Cycle Deliberate

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Practice (RCDP) educational approach.20 Existing AHA BLS faculty were recruited as

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instructors, a subset learned the new objectives and the RCDP technique for the high-

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fidelity simulation IHCA stations. Prior to the study sessions, this group taught the

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HospBLS course in an apprentice model with ongoing feedback until they achieved

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mastery as faculty of this course. All six courses had a lead instructor who developed the

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intervention content and a co-instructor, who together assured completion of key learning

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objectives and appropriate time management. See Appendix A, B, C for an overview of

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the HospBLS curriculum, list of TradBLS learning objectives and highlight of additional

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learning objectives in the HospBLS course, and a HospBLS course timetable.

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170 Assessment Tools and Outcome Measures

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Upon arrival to the Johns Hopkins Medicine Simulation Center, each student completed a

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pre-course demographic survey. After completion of the course, students completed the

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standard AHA BLS course skills testing, multiple choice question (MCQ) post-course

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exam and course evaluation tool. Study assessments included:

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1) Additional MCQs to Assess IHCA knowledge: Five MCQs were created by course faculty, assessed for readability and face

validity by a group of senior medical students and assessed for construct validity

by a resuscitation scientist and a group of physicians with specialized training in critical care and emergency medicine, all of whom are involved in resuscitation research and education.

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2) High-Fidelity Simulation Scenarios:

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Students participated as teams of two or three in two 5-minute summative

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assessments. (Appendix D)

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OOHCA scenario:

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A woman (Resusci Anne

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baseball park, and was found unresponsive and pulseless by a study confederate

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who asked the learners for help.

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IHCA scenario:

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A man (SimMan

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a hospital gown, head on a pillow, head of bed up, side rails up) became gray and

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unresponsive, thus two confederate nurses call for help.

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Simulator) collapsed on the bathroom floor at a

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3G) in a hospital bed, in a simulated hospital room (manikin in

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The primary outcome measure was the chest compression fraction (CCF) based on

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observations that students confronted with a simulated IHCA struggle with navigating the

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environment, causing both delays and frequent pauses in chest compressions. Secondary

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outcome measures included time elapsed from call for help and entry of participants into

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room to: 1) initiation of chest compressions and 2) first defibrillation, as well as

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knowledge and performance of IHCA-specific CPR quality process measures, i.e. use of

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stepstool, backboard, “CPR lever” to automatically flatten hospital bed, maneuvers in

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response to being unable to effectively ventilate with one-person bagging (i.e. either two-

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person BMV and/or placement of oral airway), oxygen tubing connected to oxygen flow

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meter, and proper flow rates for oxygen.

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Effect Size Calculation

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A convenience sample of 122 first-year medical students divided into teams of two

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projected 30 teams per study arm. Pilot data from previous TradBLS courses had a

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mean(±standard deviation) CCF of 0.50(±0.08). Assuming an alpha of 0.05, beta of 0.2,

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our sample size gave us 80% power to detect a clinically significant difference in the

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CCF as small as .06.

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213 Data Abstraction

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Two video angles were captured for all scenarios to facilitate review. Two different sets

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of reviewers abstracted data from the video recordings of the IHCA and OOHCA

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summative assessments. The reviewers used custom-built software designed to facilitate

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accurate and efficient data collection. Data captured were automatically exported to

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comma-separated values (CSV) file, combined and transferred to Stata/IC 13 (StataCorp

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LP, College Station, TX) for statistical analysis, eliminating risk of transcription errors.

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Reviewers were blinded to study group allocation of the participants. For each set of

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videos, 20% were scored by both reviewers independently in order to calculate inter-rater

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reliability.

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Data Analysis

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Proportions were calculated for categorical variables and compared using the chi square

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statistic. Means and standard deviations were calculated for continuous variables with t-

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test comparison of means reported. If data were not normally distributed, then medians

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and interquartile ranges were reported and groups were compared utilizing the Wilcoxon

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Rank Sum test. A p-value < 0.05 was considered significant. For inter-rater reliability,

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correlation coefficients were calculated on the 20% overlap samples for all primary

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outcome measures. The study methods adhered to the CONSORT 2010 and simulation-

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based guidelines.21,22 (Appendix E, F)

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Results:

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One hundred twenty-two students were enrolled and divided into fifty-nine teams. All

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students completed each assessment, either as an individual or part of a team. The two

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groups were similar at baseline in terms of training and experience except more TradBLS

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students were BLS instructors whereas more of the HospBLS students had assisted with

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real-life CPR in the past. (Table 1) However, there were too few of these students for us

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to control for these differences in our analysis. All students passed the AHA MCQ test

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and skills assessment necessary to receive their BLS cards – the results of this evaluation

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are not included as part of the results.

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Knowledge

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The HospBLS group was significantly more likely to identify a set of a priori identified

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maneuvers to improve quality of in-hospital CPR. The HospBLS group was also more

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likely to identify ideal oxygen flow rates and maneuvers to attempt when unable to

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effectively ventilate. (Table 2)

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Simulation Skills Performance

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Overview of TradBLS Team Performance

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All TradBLS students passed the AHA skills stations and met the overarching objectives,

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i.e. started chest compressions and defibrillated the manikin in both the OOHCA and

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IHCA high-fidelity summative assessments. However, in the IHCA assessment 25% of

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TradBLS teams took more than a minute to start compressions and few teams performed

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any maneuvers to optimize quality of compressions for a patient in a hospital bed.

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Regarding airway management, only one team connected oxygen tubing to the flow

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meter and chose an appropriate flow rate. None of the TradBLS teams independently

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noticed the manikin’s chest was not rising in response to bagging, and once pointed out to

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them by a confederate, no teams performed any maneuvers beyond repositioning the

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mask in an attempt to address the insufficient ventilation. (Tables 3-5)

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Detailed Comparison of TradBLS and HospBLS Simulation Performance

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Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

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All teams started compressions and successfully operated a public access AED. However,

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HospBLS teams had larger CCF: [69% (65-74) vs 58% (53-62), p<0.001], were faster at

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initiating compressions: [median: 9 seconds (IQR:7-12) vs. 22 (18-31), p<0.001], and had

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shorter pre-shock pauses. (Table 5)

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In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

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HospBLS teams had larger CCF and were quicker to initiate compressions. (Figures 1

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and 2) In addition, HospBLS teams were more likely to perform IHCA-specific

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maneuvers to optimize compressions: utilize CPR button to quickly flatten bed, lower

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side rails, and utilize backboard and stepstool. All teams utilized the AED to defibrillate

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within 180 seconds per AHA guidelines, [HospBLS: 122 sec (103-149) vs. TradBLS: 139

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(116 vs. 172), p=0.09]. HospBLS teams were more likely to optimize airway

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management: connect oxygen tubing and use appropriate flow rate [87% (26/30) vs. 3%

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(1/29), p<0.001]. Most remarkably, none of the TradBLS teams used any maneuvers

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beyond repositioning the mask (oral airway and/or 2-person approach to assist with

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bagging) when traditional BMV was unsuccessful, whereas every HospBLS team did so:

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[100% (30/30) vs. 0% (0/29), p<0.001]. (Tables 3 and 4)

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281 Inter-rater reliability

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Pairwise inter-rater assessments of initiation of compression time (0.99), defibrillation

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time (0.99) and compression fraction (0.90) were strongly correlated, p <0.05.

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Our data highlight that students who completed a TradBLS course based on the 2010

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AHA guidelines met existing AHA learning objectives.19 However, other than

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rudimentary BMV skills they did not appear to acquire any BLS skills that differentiate

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the lay provider from the healthcare provider and were not prepared to manage issues

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common to IHCA, such as resuscitating patients in a bed rather than on the floor. Both

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the training and skill assessments of traditional courses were conducted in a fashion that

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is incongruent with the manner in which CPR is actually performed during IHCAs.

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Though all content from the 2010 AHA curricula are essential, our HospBLS learning

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objectives addressed additional essential skills for those working in the hospital

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environment. Our data highlight that managing IHCAs is not intuitive and thus requires

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direct instruction. Our HospBLS learners developed a shared mental model (i.e.

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compatible understanding amongst team members of roles, tasks, and the situation) of an

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IHCA “high performing team”, i.e. how a larger team of 3 to 6 people (as is frequently

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the situation in a hospital) will quickly assemble themselves into a well-oiled machine to

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manage the first few minutes of an IHCA.23 These findings have three central

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implications for future Healthcare Provider BLS training related to content as well as

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delivery method.

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First, in addition to foundational resuscitation skills targeted in traditional BLS programs,

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a broader range of contextual skills are trainable, and may impact critical resuscitation

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outcomes. These skills include recognizing and managing environmental factors unique

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to the hospital setting (e.g. use of available hospital equipment, adapting chest

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compression technique to the design of a hospital bed, etc…).24,25 Specifics of these

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competencies may vary by hospital, as factors such as physical layout, equipment

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models, and procedural considerations can impact CPR performance. However, a general

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framework of the types of factors to address in training could be developed. This

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framework, along with appropriate curriculum design guidance, would allow local

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trainers to customize contextual aspects of BLS training while maintaining alignment

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with a national curriculum. In terms of operationalizing this content beyond medical

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students, our institution has one version of this contextual curriculum for medical

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students who have not previously worked in the hospital setting, another for new nurses

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on orientation, another for Security Officers, and another for ICU staff. The idea is that

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the curriculum has three levels, i.e. 1) core AHA BLS content on psychomotor skills of

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chest compressions, BMV and defibrillation, 2) core content which is contextually

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relevant to performing high quality BLS within the hospital setting and 3) extra content

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contextually relevant to that population’s environment and role within that environment.

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It is exciting to note the 2015 AHA guidelines section on education now includes

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contextualization as a “core educational concept”.18

325 Second, practicing CPR under a broader range of conditions may be beneficial in its own

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right. The variability of practice effect is a phenomenon wherein acquisition of skill and

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transfer of training are improved when an individual or team practices those skills under a

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wider array of conditions. This effect is well-documented for simple procedural26 and

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problem solving skills,27 as well as more complex team performance issues.28 Traditional

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BLS courses are highly standardized, which is desirable to ensure every learner

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completing the course has reached the same targeted level of proficiency. However, when

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the traditional BLS course is the only version available for both new and advanced

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learners in re-certification, this limits the resilience of the learner in the face of variability

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in practice, and effectively restricts learners’ ability to advance beyond fundamentals.

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There appears to be value in an ‘advanced’ BLS course, one that addresses the same core

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clinical skills as the ‘basic’ course, but in more varied and complex situations. Taken

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together, these two issues of contextual competencies and practice variability provide

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direction for the maturation of BLS curricula. For the lay provider, BLS is basic.

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Learners meet minimum thresholds of performance and that is the end of development.

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Our study’s findings suggest it is worth considering BLS from a continuous professional

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development perspective, where the fundamentals of BLS are elaborated upon in

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different contexts. Advanced learners may gain more value from practicing skills in

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different types of situations, tailored to the needs of a variety of learner groups versus the

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current “one-size-fits-all” approach.

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346 Third, it is essential to stress the time-critical and high-stakes nature of cardiac arrest

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during training. Small delays can adversely impact patients. Therefore, it is not

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appropriate to leave the contextual skills for ‘on the job training,’ per current practice.

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Teams that operate with a shared mental model perform better.29,30 Team training31 and

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team planning32 enable teams to reach high levels of shared mental models and

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performance. One promising path forward for BLS involves identifying those aspects of

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performance that can be optimized and (i.e. ‘one best way’ clearly defined) standardized

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across all settings, as well as those that should be defined and standardized locally.

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Teams can then engage in repeated training to build shared mental models and efficiency.

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Sullivan described the use of RCDP to perform 15-minute in situ simulation sessions to

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drill ward nurses on the first few minutes of a ward IHCA.33 We suspect the key element

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associated with the success of the HospBLS course is not necessarily the length of the

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course, but explicit inclusion of skills specific to IHCA with opportunities to try again

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(i.e. RCDP) until fundamental skills are mastered. Mastery learning techniques are

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increasingly associated with improved educational outcomes, with specific reports in

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relation to resuscitation topics.33-36

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This study has several important limitations. First, while the HospBLS curriculum was

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taught within the same time previously allocated for standard BLS for our students, this

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three-hour course is longer than ultra-brief courses described in the literature.37 Lee

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recently demonstrated while BLS skills can be learned in shorter courses, longer courses

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were associated with improved performance.38 Second, the HospBLS course can be more

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resource-intensive than traditional BLS courses, secondary to the high-fidelity simulators,

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simulated clinical environment and increased faculty to student ratios. However, we now

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teach the course with traditional faculty-to-student ratios for AHA courses of 1:6 and

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lower-fidelity simulators that still provide realistic practice opportunities. Requiring

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students to navigate the highly realistic simulated hospital environment and equipment

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may be the most important aspects of a contextual IHCA curriculum. Finally, we did not

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obtain reliable data on depth and rate of compressions and thus cannot comment on the

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impact of the adapted curriculum on that aspect of quality CPR, nor can we comment on

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translation of skills into the actual patient environment.

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378 Conclusions:

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Medical students participating in a traditional BLS course did not perform well in a

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simulated IHCA. Our data support use of RCDP to teach BLS curricula that is

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contextually relevant to both the in and out-of-hospital setting as components of the

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standard AHA Healthcare Provider BLS course.

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References:

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1. Merchant RM, Yang L, Becker LB, et al; American Heart Association Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation Investigators. Incidence of treated cardiac arrest in hospitalized patients in the United States. Crit Care Med. 2011 Nov;39(11):2401-6.

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2. Girotra S, Nallamothu BK, Spertus JA, Li Y, Krumholz HM, Chan PS; American Heart Association Get with the Guidelines–Resuscitation Investigators. Trends in survival after in-hospital cardiac arrest. N Engl J Med. 2012 Nov 15;367(20):191220.

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3. Girotra S, Spertus JA, Li Y, Berg RA, Nadkarni VM, Chan PS; American Heart Association Get With the Guidelines–Resuscitation Investigators. Survival trends in pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrests: an analysis from Get With the GuidelinesResuscitation. Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes. 2013 Jan 1;6(1):42-9. 4. Merchant RM, Berg RA, Yang L, Becker LB, Groeneveld PW, Chan PS; American Heart Association's Get With the Guidelines-Resuscitation Investigators. Hospital variation in survival after in-hospital cardiac arrest. J Am Heart Assoc. 2014 Jan 31;3(1):e000400.

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5. Girotra S, Cram P, Spertus JA, et al; American Heart Association's Get With the Guidelines®‐Resuscitation Investigators. Hospital variation in survival trends for inhospital cardiac arrest. J Am Heart Assoc. 2014 Jun 10;3(3):e000871. 6. Ornato JP, Peberdy MA, Reid RD, Feeser VR, Dhindsa HS; NRCPR Investigators. Impact of resuscitation system errors on survival from in-hospital cardiac arrest. Resuscitation. 2012 Jan;83(1):63-9. 7. Hazinski MF, Shuster M, Donnino MW, et al. Highlights of the 2015 American Heart Association Guidelines Update for CPR and ECC. Available at: https://eccguidelines.heart.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/2015-AHA-GuidelinesHighlights-English.pdf. Accessed September 21, 2016.

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8. Herlitz J, Aune S, Bång A, et al. Very high survival among patients defibrillated at an early stage after in-hospital ventricular fibrillation on wards with and without monitoring facilities. Resuscitation. 2005 Aug;66(2):159-66.

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9. Chan PS, Krumholz HM, Nichol G, Nallamothu BK; American Heart Association National Registry of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Investigators. Delayed time to defibrillation after in-hospital cardiac arrest. N Engl J Med. 2008 Jan 3;358(1):9-17.

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10. Chan PS, Nichol G, Krumholz HM, Spertus JA, Nallamothu BK; American Heart Association National Registry of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (NRCPR) Investigators. Hospital variation in time to defibrillation after in-hospital cardiac arrest. Arch Intern Med. 2009 Jul 27;169(14):1265-73.

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11. Herlitz J, Bang A, Alsen B, Aune S. Characteristics and outcome among patients suffering from in hospital cardiac arrest in relation to the interval between collapse and start of CPR. Resuscitation.2002;53:21– 27.

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12. Edelson DP, Abella BS, Kramer-Johansen J, et al. Effects of compression depth and pre-shock pauses predict defibrillation failure during cardiac arrest. Resuscitation. 2006 Nov;71(2):137-45.

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13. Sell RE, Sarno R, Lawrence B, et al. Minimizing pre- and post-defibrillation pauses increases the likelihood of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). Resuscitation. 2010 Jul;81(7):822-5. 14. Cheskes S, Schmicker RH, Verbeek PR, et al; Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium (ROC) investigators.The impact of peri-shock pause on survival from out-of-hospital shockable cardiac arrest during the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium PRIMED trial. Resuscitation. 2014 Mar;85(3):336-42.

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15. Christenson J, Andrusiek D, Everson-Stewart S, et al; Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium Investigators. Chest compression fraction determines survival in patients with out-of-hospital ventricular fibrillation. Circulation. 2009 Sep 29;120(13):1241-7. 16. Idris AH, Guffey D, Pepe PE, et al; Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium Investigators. Chest compression rates and survival following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Critical Care Med. 2015 Apr;43(4):840-8. 17. Talikowska M, Tohira H, Finn J. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality and patient survival outcome in cardiac arrest: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Resuscitation. 2015 Nov;96:66-77. 18. Bhanji F, Donoghue AJ, Wolff MS, Flores GE, Halamek LP, Berman JM, Sinz EH, Cheng A. Part 14: Education: 2015 American Heart Association Guidelines Update for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care. Circulation. 2015 Nov;132(18 Suppl 2):S561-73.

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19. Berg RA, Hemphill R, Abella BS, Aufderheide TP, Cave DM, Hazinski MF, Lerner EB, Rea TD, Sayre MR, Swor RA. Part 5: adult basic life support: 2010 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care. Circulation. 2010 Nov;122(18 Suppl 3):S685-705.

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20. Hunt EA, Duval-Arnould JM, Nelson-McMillan KL, et al. Pediatric resident resuscitation skills improve after "rapid cycle deliberate practice" training. Resuscitation. 2014 Jul;85(7):945-51.

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21. www.consort-statement.org, accessed 10/14/2016.

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22. Cheng A, Kessler D, Mackinnon R, et al. Reporting Guidelines for Health Care Simulation Research: Extensions to the CONSORT and STROBE Statements. Simul Healthc. 2016 Aug;11(4):238-48.

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23. Hunt EA, Walker AR, Shaffner DH, Miller MR, Pronovost PJ. Simulation of inhospital pediatric medical emergencies and cardiopulmonary arrests: highlighting the importance of the first 5 minutes. Pediatrics. 2008 Jan;121(1):e34-43.

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24. Lee DH, Kim CW, Kim SE, Lee SJ. Use of step stool during resuscitation improved the quality of chest compression in simulated resuscitation. Emerg Med Australas. 2012 Aug;24(4):369-73.

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25. Oh J, Chee Y, Lim T, Cho Y, Kim IY. Chest compression with kneeling posture in hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation: A randomised crossover simulation study. Emerg Med Australas. 2014 Dec;26(6):585-90.

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26. Holladay CL, Quinones MA. Practice variability and transfer of training: the role of self-efficacy generality. Journal of Applied Psychology. 2003 Dec;88(6):1094. 27. de Croock MB, van Merriënboer JJ, Paas FG. High versus low contextual interference in simulation-based training of troubleshooting skills: Effects on transfer performance and invested mental effort. Computers in Human Behavior. 1998 May 25;14(2):249-67. 28. Gorman JC, Cooke NJ, Amazeen PG. Training adaptive teams. Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. 2010 Jul 23. 29. Mathieu JE, Heffner TS, Goodwin GF, Salas E, Cannon-Bowers JA. The influence of shared mental models on team process and performance. Journal of Applied Psychology. 2000 Apr;85(2):273. 30. DeChurch LA, Mesmer-Magnus JR. The cognitive underpinnings of effective teamwork: a meta-analysis. Journal of Applied Psychology. 2010 Jan;95(1):32.

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31. Salas E, Diaz Granados D, Klein C, et al. Does team training improve team performance? A meta-analysis. Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. 2008 Dec 1;50(6):903-33.

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32. Stout RJ, Cannon-Bowers JA, Salas E, Milanovich DM. Planning, shared mental models, and coordinated performance: An empirical link is established. Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. 1999 Mar 1;41(1):61-71.

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33. Sullivan NJ, Duval-Arnould J, Twilley M, Smith SP, Aksamit D, Boone-Guercio P, Jeffries PR, Hunt EA. Simulation exercise to improve retention of cardiopulmonary resuscitation priorities for in-hospital cardiac arrests: A randomized controlled trial. Resuscitation. 2015 Jan;86:6-13. 34. McGaghie WC. Mastery learning: it is time for medical education to join the 21st century. Academic Medicine. 2015 Nov;90(11):1438-41.

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35. Eppich WJ, Hunt EA, Duval-Arnould JM, Siddall VJ, Cheng A. Structuring feedback and debriefing to achieve mastery learning goals. Academic Medicine. 2015 Nov;90(11):1501-8.

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36. Barsuk JH, Cohen ER, Wayne DB, Siddall VJ, McGaghie WC. Developing a Simulation-Based Mastery Learning Curriculum: Lessons From 11 Years of Advanced Cardiac Life Support. Simulation in Healthcare. 2016 Feb;11(1):52-9. 37. Panchal AR, Meziab O, Stolz U, et al. The impact of ultrabrief chest compressiononly CPR video training on responsiveness, compression rate, and hands-off time interval among bystanders in a shopping mall. Resuscitation. 2014 Sep;85(9):128790.

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536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569

38. Lee JH, Cho Y, Kang KH, Cho GC, Song KJ, Lee CH. The Effect of the Duration of Basic Life Support Training on the Learners' Cardiopulmonary and Automated External Defibrillator Skills. Biomed Res Int. 2016;2016:2420568. Epub 2016 Jul 27.

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Table 1

Table 1. Demographics of Individual Participants HospBLS

(Control)

(Intervention)

(n=60)

(n=62)

% (n)

% (n)

48%(29)

Previous ECC certification BLS

52%(31)

48%(30)

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Male

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Baseline Characteristics

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TradBLS

53%(33)

2% (1)

ACLS

2% (1)

3% (2)

97%(58)

95%(59)

8% (5)

0% (0)

3% (2)

15% (9)

0% (0)

2% (1)

EMT

0% (0)

5% (3)

Respiratory Therapist

2% (1)

0% (0)

Life Guard

0% (0)

5% (3)

Other

2% (1)

3% (2)

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PALS

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Neither PALS or ACLS

Real-life CPR role

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Nurse

te

Assisted with real-life CPR

d

BLS Instructor

0% (0)

Page 21 of 26

Table 2

Table 2. Knowledge Assessment of Individual Participants

(Control)

(Intervention)

(n=60)

(n=62)

% (n)

%(n)

P Value

ip t

Compressions

HospBLS

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Assessment Topic

TradBLS

Correct identification of methods to

us

improve quality of chest compressions*

27%(16)

87%(54)

<0.001

Identified at least 5 methods

58%(35)

100%(62)

<0.001

18%(11)

77%(48)

<0.001

17%(10)

90%(56)

<0.001

92%(55)

98%(61)

0.09

Respirations

M

Correct identification of 2-person BMV to

improve ventilation when chest rise is not

d

visible^

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Defibrillation

te

Correct identification of 15L/min O2 flow during use with BMV

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Identified all 6 methods

Correct identification of AED as single first piece of equipment to request

*In MCQ assessment, the following six choices were considered methods that can be used to improve quality of chest compressions: 1) Lowering the head of the bed, 2) Lowering the bed, 3) Compressor standing on a step stool, 4) Positioning compressor’s shoulders above the patient, 5) Locking compressor’s elbows, 6) Putting patient on a hard surface, i.e. back board ^ BMV = Bag-Mask-Ventilation

Page 22 of 26

Table 3

Table 3. Team Performance in Simulated Cardiopulmonary Arrests Simulation Scenario

TradBLS

HospBLS

Outcome Measures

(Control)

(Intervention)

(n=29)*

(n=30)*

22 (18-31)

9 (7-12)

<0.001

0% (0)

67%(20)

<0.001

0.58 (0.53-0.62)

0.69 (0.65-0.74)

<0.001

7% (2)

63%(19)

<0.001

15 (14-21)

0.05

36 (27-63)

10 (6-11)

<0.001

0% (0)

63%(19)

<0.001

0.5 (0.43-0.54)

0.73 (0.68-0.75)

<0.001

3% (1)

43%(13)

<0.001

0% (0)

23% (7)

0.006

Lowered bedrails, %(n)

34%(10)

93%(28)

<0.001

Utilized backboard, %(n)

17% (5)

70%(21)

<0.001

Utilized stepstool, %(n)

28% (8)

93%(28)

<0.001

3% (1)

87%(26)

<0.001

Chest Compression Fraction+, median (IQR)

an

Verbalized Cycle Number, %(n)

Out-of-Hospital: Defibrillation

In-Hospital: Chest Compressions

te

Compressions by 10s, %(n)

d

Time to starting, median (IQR), s

Chest Compression Fraction+,

Ac ce p

median (IQR)

22 (15-27)

M

Pre-shock Pause, median (IQR), s

Verbalized Cycle Number, %(n)

Utilized CPR button to flatten bed, %(n)

cr

Compressions by 10s, %(n)

us

Time to starting, median (IQR), s

ip t

Out-of-Hospital: Chest Compressions

P Value

In-Hospital: Airway Optimization Attached O2 with appropriate flow, %(n)

Page 23 of 26

Used oral airway and/or 2-person

0% (0)

100%(30)

<0.001

139 (117-172)

122 (103-149)

0.09

79%(23)

87%(26)

0.45

18 (12-25)

13 (6-11)

0.07

bagging, %(n)

Time to defib, median (IQR), s Defibrillation by 180s, %(n) Pre-shock Pause, median (IQR), s

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In-Hospital: Defibrillation

cr

*Unit of analysis is at the 2-person team level; Wilcoxon rank sum for median, Chi square for proportions

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+Chest Compression Fraction is defined as the amount of time during which the simulated patient was

Ac ce p

te

d

M

an

pulseless and receiving chest compressions.

Page 24 of 26

Figure 1

pt ce

Ac

63

36

27

11 6

9.5 Page 25 of 26

0

Compression Start Time (seconds) 60 80 40 20

100

ed

IHCA Time to Initiation of Chest Compressions TradBLS vs. HospBLS (median, IQR) p<0.001

TradBLS

HospBLS

54%

ce

pt

ed

IHCA Chest Compression Fraction TradBLS vs. HospBLS (median, IQR) p<0.001

Ac

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Chest Compression Fraction (%)

Figure 2

75% 68%

73%

50%

43%

Page 26 of 26

TradBLS

HospBLS