Rapid cycle deliberate practice to improve airway skills and performance of trainees in a pediatric emergency department

Objective The study objective was to determine the effect of a rapid cycle deliberate practice (RCDP) program on simulated and actual airway skills by pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) fellows. Methods We designed and implemented a 12‐month RCDP airway skills curriculum for PEM fellows at an academ...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:AEM education and training Vol. 8; no. 1
Main Authors: Edmunds, Katherine J., Shah, Ashish, Geis, Gary L., Kerrey, Benjamin T., Klein, Gina, DeBra, Rebecca, Zhang, Yin, Ahaus, Karen, Boyd, Stephanie, Thomas, Phillip, Dean, Preston
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States 01-02-2024
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Summary:Objective The study objective was to determine the effect of a rapid cycle deliberate practice (RCDP) program on simulated and actual airway skills by pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) fellows. Methods We designed and implemented a 12‐month RCDP airway skills curriculum for PEM fellows at an academic pediatric institution. The curriculum was designed using airway training literature, RCDP principals, and internal quality assurance airway video review program. Simulation training scenarios increased in complexity throughout the curriculum. PEM fellows participated in monthly sessions. Two PEM faculty facilitated the sessions, utilizing a step‐by‐step objective structured clinical evaluation (OSCE)‐style tool for each scenario. Data were collected for all four levels of the Kirkpatrick Model of Training Evaluation—participant response (reaction, pre–post session survey), skills performance in the simulation setting (learning, pre–post OSCE), skills performance for actual patients (behavior, video review), and patient outcomes (results, video review). Results During the study period (August 2021 to June 2022), 13 PEM fellows participated in 112 sessions (mean nine sessions per fellow). PEM fellows reported improved comfort in all domains of airway management, including intubation performance. Participant OSCE scores improved posttraining (pretraining median score for trainees 57 [IQR 57–59], posttraining median 61 [IQR 61–62], p = 0.0005). Over the 12 months, PEM fellows performed 45 intubation attempts in the pediatric emergency department (median patient age 4 years [IQR 1–9 years]). Compared to a 5‐year historical cohort, participants had higher first‐pass success (87% vs. 71%, p = 0.028) and shorter attempt duration (22 s vs. 29 s, p = 0.018). There was no significant difference in the frequency of oxyhemoglobin desaturation in the training period versus the historical period (7% vs. 15%, p = 0.231). Conclusions At multiple levels of educational outcomes, including participant behavior and patient outcomes, an RCDP program was associated with improved airway skills and performance of PEM fellows.
Bibliography:Supervising Editor
Stephen John Cico
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ISSN:2472-5390
2472-5390
DOI:10.1002/aet2.10928