| Literature DB >> 36031672 |
Francesco Corazza1, Elena Fiorese2, Marta Arpone2, Giacomo Tardini2, Anna Chiara Frigo3, Adam Cheng4, Liviana Da Dalt1,2, Silvia Bressan5,6.
Abstract
Different cognitive aids have been recently developed to support the management of cardiac arrest, however, their effectiveness remains barely investigated. We aimed to assess whether clinicians using any cognitive aids compared to no or alternative cognitive aids for in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) scenarios achieve improved resuscitation performance. PubMed, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, CINAHL and ClinicalTrials.gov were systematically searched to identify studies comparing the management of adult/paediatric IHCA simulated scenarios by health professionals using different or no cognitive aids. Our primary outcomes were adherence to guideline recommendations (overall team performance) and time to critical resuscitation actions. Random-effects model meta-analyses were performed. Of the 4.830 screened studies, 16 (14 adult, 2 paediatric) met inclusion criteria. Meta-analyses of eight eligible adult studies indicated that the use of electronic/paper-based cognitive aids, in comparison with no aid, was significantly associated with better overall resuscitation performance [standard mean difference (SMD) 1.16; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.64; 1.69; I2 = 79%]. Meta-analyses of the two paediatric studies, showed non-significant improvement of critical actions for resuscitation (adherence to guideline recommended sequence of actions, time to defibrillation, rate of errors in defibrillation, time to start chest compressions), except for significant shorter time to amiodarone administration (SMD - 0.78; 95% CI - 1.39; - 0.18; I2 = 0). To conclude, the use of cognitive aids appears to have benefits in improving the management of simulated adult IHCA scenarios, with potential positive impact on clinical practice. Further paediatric studies are necessary to better assess the impact of cognitive aids on the management of IHCA scenarios.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive aid; Heart arrest; Resuscitation; Simulation training; Support tool
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36031672 PMCID: PMC9420676 DOI: 10.1007/s11739-022-03041-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Emerg Med ISSN: 1828-0447 Impact factor: 5.472
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Diagram of study selection
Characteristics of included studies
| First Author; Year | Country | Study | Participants | Intervention | Control | Number of scenarios per group (Intervention/control) | Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adult | |||||||
| Schneider AJ; 199550 | USA | RCT (2 arms) | 39 anaesthesia residents | ‘Helper' (computer-based prompting device) | No device | 20/19 | VF, II degree AVB |
| Low D; 201132 | UK | RCT (2 arms) | 31 ALS-trained paediatric/ emergency/anaesthesia/surgery residents | Smartphone app (iResus) | No cognitive aid | 16/15 | PEA → VF |
| Arriaga AF; 201335 | USA | RCT (crossover) | 67 participants: anaesthesia/surgery attending physicians and residents, nurses, surgical technologist | Paper-based crisis checklist provided in booklet form | No crisis checklist | 32/36 | asystole, VF, unstable arrythmia |
| Field LC; 201436 | USA | RCT (crossover) | 47 ACLS certified senior medical students | Electronic DST installed on iPod Touch | No DST | 47/47 | Unstable bradycardia, VF, asystole, pVT, PEA |
| Lelaidier R; 201751 | France | RCT (crossover) | 46 anaesthesia residents | Smartphone application MAX (Medical Assistance eXpert) | No MAX app | 8/8 | VF |
| Donzé P; 201933 | Canada | RCT (3 arms) | 57 anaesthesia residents and consultants | Smartphone application MAX (Medical Assistance eXpert) | A) paper cognitive aid B) no cognitive aid | 20/19(A), 18(B) | VF |
| Jones I; 201952 | UK | NR-CT (crossover) | 34 participants: student nurses, BLS-certified nurses, ALS-certified nurses | Electronic decision support system (eDSS): software, in a handheld tablet device | No eDSS | 8/8 | VF, PEA |
| Shear TD; 201953 | USA | RCT (2 arms) | 34 anaesthesia residents | Dynamic electronic cognitive aid with embedded clinical decision support (dCA) | Static cognitive aid (laminated cards) | 15/19 | VF |
| Crabb DB; 202054 | USA | RCT (crossover) | 56 participants: EM attending physicians/residents, nurses, critical care technicians and paramedics | ACLS CDDS: an interactive, web-based application on a large screen | No CDDS | 16/16 | VF, pVT, asystole, PEA |
| Hejjaji V; 202055 | USA | RCT (crossover) | 53 internal medicine residents | Smartphone application “Redivus Code Blue” | No Redivus Code Blue app | 53/53 | pVT, VF, PEA |
| Hall C; 202056 | Australia | RCT (crossover) | 75 participants: doctors and nurses | Emergency Protocols Handbook: contains 15 adult and 12 paediatric pathways | No Emergency Protocols Handbook | 11/10 | pVT |
| Koers L; 202034 | Netherlands | RCT (2 arms) | 144 participants: general surgeons, gynaecologists, urologists, nurses | CAMDS (paper-based cognitive aids for the management of deteriorating surgical patients) | No CAMDS | 25/25 | 2 different scenarios: shockable and non-shockable CA |
| Grundgeiger T;202148 | Germany | RCT (2 arms) | 134 participants: emergency physicians and nurses | CA tablet app | No CA app | 32/31 | VF |
| Urman RD;202149 | USA | RCT (crossover) | 304 anesthesiologists | Emergency Manual (modified version of Stanford Emergency Manual) | No Emergency Manual | 29/32 | 2 different scenarios of PEA |
| Paediatric | |||||||
| Siebert JN; 201730 | Switzerland | RCT (2 arms) | 20 paediatric residents | Augmented reality glasses (Google glass) with PALS guidelines | PALS pocket reference card | 10/10 | pVT |
| Siebert JN; 202031 | Switzerland | RCT (2 arms) | 26 paediatric residents | Tablet app “Guiding Pad” | PALS pocket reference card | 13/13 | pVT |
ACLS advanced cardiac life support, ALS advanced life support, AVB atrioventricular block, CA cardiac arrest, CDDS Clinical Decision Display System, DST decision support tool, EM Emergency Medicine, NR-CT non-randomized control trial, PALS paediatric advanced life support, PEA = pulseless electrical activity, pVT pulseless ventricular tachycardia, RCT = randomized controlled trial, UK United Kingdom, USA United States of America, VF ventricular fibrillation
Quality assessment of included studies
Fig. 2Meta-analyses of adult studies for the outcome of teams’ overall performance
Fig. 3Meta-analyses of outcomes for paediatric studies