| Literature DB >> 32326948 |
Helen Berg1, Aslak Steinsbekk2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The aim was to investigate if individual self-practice of the ABCDE approach (Airways, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure) in an immersive and interactive virtual reality (VR) application gave non-inferior learning outcome compared to using traditional equipment (TP) in first year medical and nursing students.Entities:
Keywords: ABCDE approach; Clinical skills; Immersive; Individual self-practice; Interactive; Interactive virtual reality; Simulation; Virtual reality
Year: 2020 PMID: 32326948 PMCID: PMC7181571 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-020-02030-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
The information the students got regarding which eight observation to do and the order they should be done in
| ABCDE algorithm | Observations |
|---|---|
| A- airways | 1: observe if the airways are free -document |
| B- breathing | 2: count the respiration frequency (The number breaths per minute, one breath = inbreath + outbreath) -document |
| 3: get the oxygen saturation using a digital oximeter -document | |
| C- circulation | 4: get the blood pressure using a digital blood pressure gauge -document |
| 5: count pulse (the number of heart beats per minute) -document | |
| D- disability | 6: observe if the patient is conscious -document |
| E- exposure | 7: get the temperature using a digital ear thermometer -document |
| 8: observe if the skin is normal -document |
Features in the practice part of the VR application (the VirSam ABCDE application)
| VR-features | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Immersion | Be presented in a 3D virtual room modelled from an equipped observation room and having 360-degree vision. |
| Interaction | Virtual hands to pick up and move things and to get haptic response. |
| Virtual patient (VP) | A healthy older male person lying on the bed half dressed, having visual response (eye blinking, head movement, open and close mouth, chest movement), haptic response (breath, pulse on the wrist), and changing clinical value responses to use of digital equipment (BP, temperature, O2 saturation). No vocal response. |
| Haptic feedback | Vibration in the hand controllers when feeling the pulse (each heart beat) on the wrist, and when placing the hand on the chest (each respiratory intake). |
| Audio feedback | Inflation sounds from blood pressure gauge and “bip” from ear thermometer when measures ready (5 s) |
| Wristwatch | On left hand. Classic design showing real-time including seconds. |
| Patient monitor | Monitor with touch screen buttons to get clinical values (BP, temperature, O2 saturation). |
| Documentation tablet | Tablet with touch screen buttons for responses, including numeric pad for entering clinical values and choice between predefined options. |
| Instructions | A silent subtitle video running on a wall mounted screen showing how to do the observations, and a poster on the wall with the ABCDE observations. |
| Feedback | When the user select that all documentations are done, a scoreboard appears with detailed feedback and a summary maximum of three stars, covering order of observations, whether all observations were done and if the values from the observations were correct. |
Fig. 1Flow of participants (VR; virtual reality, TP; traditional practice)
Baseline characteristics of the participants. The n for each variable can vary due to missing, n (%)
| Baseline variables | All ( | VR group ( | TP group ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||
| -Male | 50 (17.3) | 28 (20.3) | 22 (15.8) |
| -Female | 227 (78.5) | 110 (79.7) | 117 (84.2) |
| Age | |||
| -Under 20 year | 66 (23.8) | 25 (18.1) | 41 (29.5) |
| -20–24 year | 179 (64.6) | 96 (69.6) | 83 (59.7) |
| -Over 25 year | 32 (11.6) | 17 (12.3) | 15 (10.8) |
| Study program | |||
| -Medicine | 69 (23.9) | 36 (24.2) | 33 (23.6) |
| -Nursing | 220 (76.1) | 113 (75.8) | 107 (76.4) |
| Have you previously (number answering yes): | |||
| -Worked in health care | 157 (56.7) | 80 (58.0) | 77 (55.4) |
| -Been taught cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) | 243 (87.7) | 122 (88.4) | 121 (87.1) |
| -Conducted systematic clinical observation | 33 (11.9) | 18 (13.0) | 15 (10.8) |
| -Been taught the ABCDE-approach | 64 (23.1) | 38 (27.5) | 26 (18.7) |
| -Used a blood pressure gauge | 119 (43.0) | 61 (44.2) | 58 (41.7) |
| -Counted respiration frequency on someone else | 112 (40.4) | 52 (37.7) | 60 (43.2) |
| -Tried virtual reality googles | 72 (26.0) | 39 (28.3) | 33 (23.7) |
| -Trained using a simulator manikin | 112 (40.4) | 48 (34.8) | 64 (46.0) |
Fig. 2Primary outcome
Secondary outcomes measures concerning the ABCDE approach. Numbers are n (%) or mean (SD) with difference between the groups and 95% confidence interval (95%CI)
| Outcome measure | Individual VR | Individual TP | Absolute diff. % points (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of participants that in the questionnaire had: | ||||
| - all eight observations in correct ABCDE order | 81 (54.4) | 87 (62.1) | 7.8 (−3.6 to 19.1) | 0.180 |
| - ABCDE in the right order | 136 (91.3) | 127 (90.7) | 0.6 (−7.2 to 6.0) | 0.868 |
| Number of participants in the practical test who: | ||||
| - had all eight observations documented, but ABCDE in wrong order | 6 (4.0) | 5 (3.6) | 0.5 (−4.9 to 4.0) | 0.840 |
| - did not complete all eight observations | 106 (71.1) | 97 (69.3) | 1.9 (−12.4 to 8.7) | 0.730 |
| - did not complete all eight observations, but had the right ABCDE order on the documented observations | 55 (36.9) | 56 (40.0) | 3.1 (−8.1 to 14.3) | 0.590 |
| - wrote both the type of observation and the result of the observation | 89 (59.7) | 86 (61.4) | 1.7 (−9.6 to 13.0) | 0.768 |
| Number of participants in practical test with correct observation of (independent of order): | ||||
| - Airways | 145 (97.3) | 135 (96.4) | 0.9 (−4.9 to 3.1) | 0.664 |
| - Respiratory frequency | 145 (97.3) | 125 (89.3) | 8.0 (2.3 to13.8) | 0.006 |
| - Saturation | 141 (94.6) | 135 (96.4) | 1.8 (−3.0 to 6.5) | 0.461 |
| - Blood Pressure | 144 (96.6) | 137 (97.9) | 1.2 (−2.5 to 5.0) | 0.530 |
| - Pulse | 118 (79.2) | 121 (86.4) | 7.2 (−1.4 to 15.9) | 0.104 |
| - Disability | 93 (62.4) | 84 (60.0) | 2.4 (−13.7 to 8.8) | 0.674 |
| - Temperature | 84 (56.4) | 82 (58.6) | 2.2 (−9.2 to 13.6) | 0.706 |
| - Skin | 77 (51.7) | 64 (45.7) | 6.0 (−17.5 to 5.5) | 0.311 |
| Average number of observations documented from practical test | Mean 6.3 SD (1.5) | Mean 6.4 SD (1.4) | Mean diff. 0.05 95%CI (−0.382 to 0.285) | 0.775 |
| Average number of observations documented in the right order from A (Airways) in practical test | Mean 5.1 SD (2.5) | Mean 5.2 SD (2.3) | Mean diff. 0.07 95%CI (− 0.623 to 0.478) | 0.796 |
Secondary outcomes measures concerning the students experiences with the teaching session. Numbers are n (%) or mean (SD) with difference between the groups and 95% confidence interval (95%CI)
| Outcome measure | Individual VR | Individual TP | Absolute diff. % points (95%CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of participants who thought: | ||||
| - they got enough training about ABCDE before starting practicing | 36 (24.2) | 29 (20.7) | 3.4 (−13.1 to 6.2) | 0.483 |
| - they learned what observations to do trough the introduction video | 83 (55.7) | 81 (57.9) | 2.2 (−9.3 to 13.6) | 0.712 |
| - they had enough time to practice | 48 (32.7) | 56 (40.3) | 7.6 (−3.5 to 18.8) | 0.180 |
| - the way to practice was likable | 123 (82.6) | 50 (36) | 46.6 (36.5 to 56.6) | < 0.001 |
| - the training and practice were a good way to learn the ABCDE approach | 126 (85.1) | 67 (48.2) | 36.9 (26.8 to 47.0) | < 0.001 |
| - they were confident to conduct an ABCDE examination | 43 (28.9) | 37 (26.4) | 2.4 (−12.7 to 7.9) | 0.644 |
| System usability scale (SUS, range 0–100) | Mean 79.7 SD (14.6) | Mean 73.7 SD (16.2) | Mean diff. 6.0 95% CI (2.8 to 10.1) | < 0.001 |