• Simul Healthc · Apr 2012

    Pilot-phase findings from high-fidelity In Situ medical simulation investigation of emergency department procedural sedation.

    • Leo Kobayashi, Jennifer A Dunbar-Viveiros, Jeffrey Devine, Mark S Jones, Frank L Overly, John W Gosbee, and Gregory D Jay.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Brown University; and Medical Simulation Center, Rhode Island Hospital, Suite 106, Coro West Bldg, 1 Hoppin St, Providence, RI 02903, USA. LKobayashi@lifespan.org
    • Simul Healthc. 2012 Apr 1; 7 (2): 81-94.

    IntroductionEmergency department procedural sedation (EDPS) is becoming widespread. Simulation may enhance patient safety through evidence-based training, effective assessment, and research of EDPS operators in pertinent knowledge, skills, processes, and teamwork.MethodsInvestigators developed a 2-scenario in situ simulation-based methodology and research tool kit for objective examination of EDPS practice. The emphasis was on protocol-driven presedation preparation, intrasedation vigilance and readiness for adverse events, and postsedation reassessment. Pilot sessions were conducted to test the methodology at an academic 719-bed hospital, with Institutional Review Board approval.ResultsFive interns and 5 attending emergency physicians completed pilot sessions resulting in protocol revisions to optimize simulation consistency, research tool sets, data acquisition, and operational conditions. Pilot data sets demonstrated interscenario consistency and intersubject reproducibility for timing, progression, and duration of critical EDPS events; high levels of perceived realism and relevance; and utility and suggested validity of the study methodology as an EDPS research mechanism. Small sample sizes limited the study methodology's ability to distinguish between the subject groups' clinical performances (critical action completion, probe detection, and situational awareness) except with composite scoring of presedation and postsedation assessments. Key EDPS preparation, adverse event management, and reassessment actions were selected to derive a Simulation EDPS Safety Composite Score that differentiated inexperienced [4.60 ± 0.8 on a 10-point score (n = 3)] and experienced EDPS operators [8.95 ± 1.03 (n = 5); P = 0.0007].ConclusionsIn situ simulation is a useful and relevant means to investigate EDPS patient safety. Pilot sessions have cleared the way for further experimental safety intervention research and development with the simulation-based methodology.

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