Anesthesia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Use of Point-of-View Camera to Faciliate Learning of Endotracheal Intubation
The study team proposes that mounting a point-of-view camera on the student's head will enable the team to view what the student is seeing in real-time when intubating with a normal laryngoscope. This will allow the team to guide the students accurately. When used in conjunction with the established simulation programme in the department, it is believed that this will improve the learning and retention of this skill when compared to standard teaching.
The ability to correctly perform an endotracheal intubation is a life-saving skill that every
doctor should possess. It is an integral part of established protocols for resuscitation and
advanced cardiac life support (ACLS). It is an essential procedural skill that is taught to
all students at the Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, NUS. It is also recommended by the
American Association of Medical Colleges as an essential procedural skill for medical
students to learn.
Timely and correctly performed endotracheal intubation can be life-saving because it
maintains and protects the airway, reliably provides adequate tidal volumes, frees the hands
of rescuers, allows the removal of airway secretions and provides a route for giving drugs.
However, poorly performed endotracheal intubation exposes patients to the life-threatening
risks associated with the unrecognised misplacement of a tracheal tube and leads to delays in
resuscitative efforts.
Unfortunately, there is a comparatively high failure rate associated with endotracheal
intubation because this skill is difficult to learn and retain. Mulcaster et al reported
that, to achieve a 90% intubation success rate, a mean of 47 intubation attempts were
required. In a similar study, Konrad et al found that a mean of 57 attempts were required to
achieve a 90% intubation success rate. This difficulty in learning is compounded by the
finding that, without repeated practice, the ability to perform endotracheal intubation
successfully diminishes rapidly. The intubation success rate of infrequent users who have
successfully learned to intubate has been shown to fall to as little as 57% after only 6
months. Clearly, there is a need to improve the learning and retention of endotracheal
intubation.
The PI previously published a randomized controlled trial in the journal Medical Education to
study the utility of experiential learning on a simulator in the learning and retention of
this skill. It was showed that with experiential learning, more students were able to
intubate a manikin at 3 months (64.5% vs. 36.9%, p<0.001). With repeated learning (refresher
every 3 months), 86% of students were able to successfully perform endotracheal intubation at
12 months.
However, there are limitations to acquiring this skill on a simulator, as it has been argued
that expertise gained on manikins may not translate into successful intubations in patients.
Learning on actual patients is desirable, but impractical given the large number of students
in our medical school. On average, each YLLSoM student only intubates between 3-5 patients,
far less than the 47-57 endotracheal intubations necessary to gain expertise as cited
earlier. Combining the learning experiences on the simulator with that on actual patients
appears to be the best solution.
Therefore it is important to optimize the limited learning opportunities on patients.
However, this is often difficult because the mouth is small, and the view of the pharyngeal
structures is limited. The tutor will not be able to view what the student is seeing as there
is only one line of vision. More recently, video-laryngoscopes, which are laryngoscopes with
a camera at its tip, have emerged as an effective means of teaching endotracheal intubation.
However, the technique of using the video-laryngoscope differs from using the common
laryngoscope due to its different shape and the requirement that the student looks at the
screen rather than into the patient's mouth. Hence it is unclear if the ability to
successfully perform endotracheal intubation with a video-laryngoscope necessarily translates
into the ability to perform endotracheal intubation with a normal laryngoscope.
The study team proposes that mounting a point-of-view camera on the student's head will
enable the team to view what the student is seeing in real-time when intubating with a normal
laryngoscope. This will allow the team to guide the students accurately. When used in
conjunction with the established simulation programme in the department, it is believed that
this will improve the learning and retention of this skill when compared to standard
teaching.
Methods:
Students will be randomised into 2 groups. For the study group, students will have a GoPro
Hero4 camera mounted on their head which will be linked via Wi-Fi to allow real-time
streaming of the view onto a laptop, while students in control group will have a regular type
of tutorial and practicing session. Data such as time to successful intubation and Cormack
Lehane laryngoscopy view will be recorded. At the end of the session, tutors will use a
debrief guide to give feedback to students. Students from the study group will be given a
questionnaire to be completed at the end of the session.
These students will be recalled 3 months later. Each student will individually be assessed on
his or her intubation skill using 2 different manikin: a normal airway manikin and a
difficult airway manikin. All the students will be wearing the GoPro Hero4 this time round.
Data such as time to successful intubation and Cormack Lehane laryngoscopy view will be
recorded. Students will be given feedback as appropriate by tutors for their learning
purposes using the same debrief guide. There will be questionnaires for both students and
tutors to fill in this time.
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