Nursing and Paramedic Students Collaborate in CPR/BLS Simulation Activities

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Nursing and Paramedic Students Collaborate in CPR/BLS Simulation Activities Nursing Faculty: Milena Staykova Deidira Stewart Jennifer Everidge Susan Jones Carol Bailey Carolyn Lyon Melody Sharp Emergency Medical Services Faculty: Mark Cromer Roxanne Wilson Elliot Carhart

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Nursing Faculty: Milena Staykova Deidira Stewart Jennifer Everidge Susan Jones Carol Bailey Carolyn Lyon Melody Sharp. Emergency Medical Services Faculty: Mark Cromer Roxanne Wilson Elliot Carhart. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Nursing and Paramedic Students Collaborate in CPR/BLS Simulation Activities

Page 1: Nursing and Paramedic Students Collaborate in  CPR/BLS Simulation Activities

Nursing and Paramedic Students Collaborate in CPR/BLS Simulation Activities

Nursing Faculty: • Milena Staykova • Deidira Stewart• Jennifer Everidge• Susan Jones• Carol Bailey• Carolyn Lyon• Melody Sharp

Emergency Medical Services Faculty:

Mark CromerRoxanne Wilson

Elliot Carhart

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Objectives

Upon completion of the presentation, participants will be able to:

Conclude that CPR/BLS collaborative learning activity increased students’ self-perception of knowledge

retention and ability to perform CPR/BLS.

Validate the importance of a collaborative learning activity to improve students’ self-perception of CPR/BLS

knowledge retention and skills.

Network with colleagues experienced in nursing and paramedic education and engaging students in active

learning.

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Background• The Institute of Medicine (2003) and the Quality and Safety Education for Nurses

(2011) have considered interdisciplinary teamwork and collaboration for improving quality and safety in patient care.

• Collaboration between nurses and paramedic personnel is critical for quality of care and for positive patient outcomes in emergency situations (Melby, 2001).

• Nursing and paramedic students are expected to demonstrate competence during events requiring CPR/BLS in community or clinical settings.

• Studies show that after initial certification, the retention of the CPR/BLS skills requires reinforcement; otherwise, a deterioration of skills is observed (Brown et al., 2006).

• In settings of stressful situations nurses, physicians, and paramedics have deviated from the CPR/BLS standards (Martin, 2005).

• Many authors urge the curricula of healthcare professionals to reinforce CPR/BLS skills and to evaluate the performance of these skills (Krahan, 2011).

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Purpose

• To encourage the students to practice CPR/BLS skills in a collaborative environment

• To help students self-evaluate the retention of CPR/BLS knowledge and skills

• To enhance the students’ readiness to enter the multidisciplinary-healthcare field

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Research question (RQ) and Hypothesis (H):• RQ: For nursing and paramedic students, what is the

students’ self-perception of the effects of an interprofessional learning activity on students’ knowledge retention and ability to perform CPR/BLS?

• H1: The nursing and paramedic students’ self-perception of knowledge retention and ability to perform CPR/BLS will increase after an interprofessional learning activity.

• Hₒ: The nursing and paramedic students’ self-perception of knowledge retention and ability to perform CPR/BLS will NOT increase after an interprofessional learning activity.

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Method• This IRB approved descriptive study was based on a triangulation

(a) IP learning activity based on students’ team interactions (b) 1:1 observation by certified faculty (c) pre-and-post learning-activity survey • Descriptive (%, µ, δ) and Inferential statistics (paired t-test)

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Sample• A convenience sample of 56 students:

- 36 junior-level nursing students- 20 sophomore-level paramedic (EMS) students

• 10 Faculty Members:- 8 from nursing program- 3 from paramedic (EMS) program

• 1 MSN student

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Design• A pre-activity survey (white paper)• A 10-item questionnaire (Josipovic, 2009)• A Visual Analog Self-Knowledge Assessment Tool

(VASKAT) to collect data:– Zero (0) on the scale- lowest rating – Ten (10) on the scale- highest self-knowledge and skills rating

• Case-based simulation activity- 2011 American Heart Association BLS guidelines

• Manikins of moderate fidelity • A team of 2 nursing and 1 paramedic students • Collaboration and peer-teaching using professional

language and constructive feedback• Post-activity survey- yellow paper

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EMS and Nursing students’ pre-and-post VASKAT survey percentage agreement on

each question Nursing VASKAT

0.00%

10.00%

20.00%

30.00%

40.00%

50.00%

60.00%

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Questions

Values

7.4

7.6

7.8

8

8.2

8.4

8.6

8.8

9

9.2

9.4

Pre-SurveyPost SurveyMean

EMS VASKAT

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Questions

Values

9

9.1

9.2

9.3

9.4

9.5

9.6

9.7

9.8

9.9

10

Pre-Survey %Post-Survey %Mean

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Results: Difference in means between the EMS and nursing students’ responses for each question

using the VASKAT

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

VASKAT

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10Questions

Camparison of the means

EMS Pre-Survey EMS Post-Survey Nursing Pre-Survey Nursing Post-Survey

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Paired t-Test Calculations Df T-Test p-value

EMS, n=20 19 2.31154E-08 <0.01

Nursing, n=36 35 1.25876E-44 <0.01

Rejection of the null hypothesis based on the

statistical calculation

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Conclusions• The nursing and paramedic students’ self-perception of

knowledge retention and ability to perform CPR/BLS increased after the interprofessional learning activity.

• IP activity led to an increase of the students’ self-perception of knowledge retention and ability to perform CPR/BLS after the collaborative activity.

• The IP activity was more beneficial to the nursing students.

• However, both groups experienced an increased self-perception of knowledge retention and ability to perform CPR/BLS after simulation learning activities.

• Nursing students may benefit from curriculum integrating CPR/BLS knowledge and skill refreshment classes or annual CPR/ BLS competency validation.

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ReferencesJosipovic, P., Webb, M., & Mc Grath, I. (2009). Basic life support knowledge of

undergraduate nursing and chiropractic students. Australian Journal of Advanced Nursing, 26(4), 58-63.

Krahn, R. E. (2011). Basic Life Support: A Call for Reevaluation by Nurse Educators. Nursing Education Perspectives, 32(2), 128. doi:10.5480/1536-5026-32.2.128

Institute of Medicine. (2003, April 18). Health professions education: A bridge to quality [Workshop Report]. Washington, DC: Author.

Martin, V. R. (2005). Poor technique: All too common. Nursing, 35(4), 35. Melby, V. (2001). The adrenaline rush: nursing students' experiences with the Northern

Ireland Ambulance Service. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 34(6), 727-736.Oermann, M. H., Kardong-Edgren, S., Odom-Maryon, T., Ha, Y., McColgan, J. K.,

Hurd, D., et al. (2010). HeartCodeTM BLS with voice assisted manikin for teaching nursing students: Preliminary results. Nursing Education Perspectives, 31(5), 303-308.

Söderholm, H. M., & Sonnenwald, D. H. (2010). Visioning future emergency healthcare collaboration: Perspectives from large and small medical centers. Journal of The American Society For Information Science & Technology, 61(9), 1808-1823.

Quality and Safety Education for Nurses. (2011). Quality and safety competencies. Chapel Hill, NC: Author.

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QUESTIONS AND COMMENTS