Obstetric Anesthesia Problems Clinical Trial
Official title:
Leader and Team Performance During PPH Simulated Scenario: a Comparison Between Self- and Expert's Assessment
The primary aim of this study is the progress of the performance of the leader and of the team for the postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) before and after four high-fidelity standardized scenarios of severe PPH (1500 mL blood loss) due to refractory uterine atony with anesthesia trainees.
8 teams were studied: each team consisted of six participants, all anesthesia trainees, who
were given the following roles for the scenario: senior anesthesiologist, anesthesia trainee,
obstetrician, midwife, and nurse. The teams encountered the same scenario of a patient with
atonic PPH following vaginal delivery. The scenario was repeated four times and the assigned
roles to the participants, except that one of the senior anesthesiologists, rotated every
each scenario.For the design of the PPH checklist, the authors reviewed PPH guidelines from
recognized obstetric bodies (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and
the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists), relevant papers from the literature
and the investigator's institutional PPH protocol. The final action items for the checklist
were selected by consensus by all authors. A standardized, 23 key tasks were identified for
inclusion on the PPH checklist (non-behavioral skills) and this checklist worked as the
reference guide for pre and post-workshop evaluation of the trainees.
For the design of the non-technical skills evaluation scores, the authors reviewed the
non-technical skills evaluation instruments, such as the Anaesthetists' Non-Technical Skills
(ANTS) behavioural marker system and the Ottawa Global Rating Scale (GRS). The final action
items for the checklist were selected by consensus by all authors. Standardized, evaluation
and self-evaluation questionnaires were developed .
No educational training was performed before the performance of the first scenario and
participants were naìˆve to the scenario before performing each simulation.
All the teams underwent standardized educational training immediately before the second,
third, and fourth scenarios. Every standardized educational training consisted of a 30
minutes session. At the beginning of the session, each participant was invited to write, in
three minutes, on a piece of paper, what they would do in case of postpartum bleeding.
Afterward each participant was invited to share and to write on the blackboard, one by one,
on turn, the clinical procedures that he had previously reported in his personal paper. After
this session the instructor, after having asked to all the participant whether there were
something else to add, integrated, if necessary, the missing elements by using the 23 key
tasks and reconfirmed the agreement with the group itself in order to have a shared
check-list of the postpartum hemorrhage treatment.
The scenario consisted of a severe PPH (1500 mL blood loss) due to refractory uterine atony
in a multiparous 28-year-old patient who had undergone a spontaneous vaginal delivery. The
patient became tachycardic and hypotensive consistent with hemorrhagic shock. All simulations
were performed in the simulation room using a high-fidelity mannequin (SinMom Maternal and
Neonatal Birthing Simulator, Laerdal, Norway). All simulations were videotaped. The
simulation was stopped when each team completed all 23 tasks of the checklist, or when 15 min
had elapsed.
A study investigator, expert in both PPH and simulation debriefing, not involved in the
simulation, observed each scenario to record and check the team's technical skills according
to the established 23 PPH key tasks. The behavioral scores were assigned by two independent
observers, experts in communication and evaluation in simulation, who reviewed the videos of
each simulation. After each simulation all participants were asked to complete a survey
related to the leader and the team behaviors. Questions required a yes/no answer or an answer
based on an ordinal scale (1=poor, 5=excellent). Survey questions are presented in the
Appendix
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