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首页> 外文期刊>Emergency medicine journal: EMJ >To lead or not to lead? Prospective controlled study of emergency nurses' provision of advanced life support team leadership.
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To lead or not to lead? Prospective controlled study of emergency nurses' provision of advanced life support team leadership.

机译:领导还是不领导?对急诊护士提供高级生命支持团队领导力的前瞻性对照研究。

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摘要

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: In many emergency departments advanced life support (ALS) trained nurses do not assume a lead role in advanced resuscitation. This study investigated whether emergency nurses with previous ALS training provided good team leadership in a simulated cardiac arrest situation. METHODS: A prospective study was conducted at five emergency departments and one nurses' association meeting. All participants went through the same scenario. Details recorded included baseline blood pressure and pulse rate, time in post, time of ALS training, and subjective stress score (1 = hardly stressed; 10 = extremely stressed). Scoring took into account scenario understanding, rhythm recognition, time to defibrillation, appropriateness of interventions, and theoretical knowledge. RESULTS: Of 57 participants, 20 were ALS trained nurses, 19 were ALS trained emergency senior house officers (SHOs), and 18 were emergency SHOs without formal ALS training. The overall mean score for doctors without ALS training was 69.5%, compared with 72.3% for ALS trained doctors and 73.7% for ALS trained nurses. Nurses found the experience less stressful (subjective stress score 5.78/10) compared with doctors without ALS training (6.5/10). The mean time taken to defibrillate from the appearance of a shockable rhythm on the monitor by the nurses and those SHOs without ALS training was 42 and 40.8 seconds, respectively. CONCLUSION: ALS trained nurses performed as well as ALS trained and non ALS trained emergency SHOs in a simulated cardiac arrest situation and had greater awareness of the potentially reversible causes of cardiac arrest. Thus if a senior or middle grade doctor is not available to lead the resuscitation team, it may be appropriate for experienced nursing staff with ALS training to act as ALS team leaders rather than SHOs.
机译:背景和目的:在许多急诊科中,受过高级生命支持(ALS)培训的护士在高级复苏中不承担领导作用。这项研究调查了接受过ALS培训的急诊护士是否在模拟的心脏骤停情况下提供了良好的团队领导能力。方法:在五个急诊科和一个护士协会会议上进行了一项前瞻性研究。所有参与者都经历了相同的场景。记录的详细信息包括基线血压和脉搏率,术后时间,ALS训练时间和主观压力评分(1 =几乎没有压力; 10 =极度紧张)。计分考虑了情景理解,节奏识别,除颤时间,干预措施的适当性和理论知识。结果:在57位参与者中,有20位是经过ALS培训的护士,有19位是经过ALS培训的紧急高级房屋官(SHOs),还有18位是未经正式ALS培训的紧急SHO。未经ALS培训的医生的总体平均得分为69.5%,而ALS培训的医生为72.3%,ALS培训的护士为73.7%。与没有ALS培训的医生(6.5 / 10)相比,护士发现这种经历的压力较小(主观压力评分为5.78 / 10)。护士和未经ALS培训的SHO出现监护人出现令人震惊的节律时,对他们进行除颤的平均时间分别为42秒和40.8秒。结论:在模拟心脏骤停情况下,受过ALS培训的护士与经过ALS培训的护士和未经ALS培训的紧急SHO表现相同,并且对潜在的可逆性心脏骤停原因有了更多的了解。因此,如果没有高级或中级医生来领导复苏小组,则适合受过ALS培训的经验丰富的护理人员担任ALS小组负责人,而不是SHO。

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