Higher resuscitation guideline adherence in paramedics with use of real-time ventilation feedback during simulated out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a randomised controlled trial

  • Lyra Clark
  • , Julie Samsoee Kjoelbye
  • , Rasmus Meyer Lyngby
  • , Roselil Maria Oelrich
  • , Annemarie Silver
  • , Helle Collatz Christensen
  • , Charlotte Barfod
  • , Freddy Lippert
  • , Dimitra Nikoletou
  • , Tom Quinn
  • , Fredrik Folke

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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    Abstract

    To investigate whether real-time ventilation feedback would improve provider adherence to ventilation guidelines. Non-blinded randomised controlled simulation trial. One Emergency Medical Service trust in Copenhagen. 32 ambulance crews consisting of 64 on-duty basic or advanced life support paramedics from Copenhagen Emergency Medical Service. Participant exposure to real-time ventilation feedback during simulated out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The primary outcome was ventilation quality, defined as ventilation guideline-adherence to ventilation rate (8-10 bpm) and tidal volume (500-600 ml) delivered simultaneously. The intervention group performed ventilations in adherence with ventilation guideline recommendations for 75.3% (Interquartile range (IQR) 66.2%-82.9%) of delivered ventilations, compared to 22.1% (IQR 0%-44.0%) provided by the control group. When controlling for participant covariates, adherence to ventilation guidelines was 44.7% higher in participants receiving ventilation feedback. Analysed separately, the intervention group performed a ventilation guideline-compliant rate in 97.4% (IQR 97.1%-100%) of delivered ventilations, versus 66.7% (IQR 40.9%-77.9%) for the control group. For tidal volume compliance, the intervention group reached 77.5% (IQR 64.9%-83.8%) of ventilations within target compared to 53.4% (IQR 8.4%-66.7%) delivered by the control group. Real-time ventilation feedback increased guideline compliance for both ventilation rate and tidal volume (combined and as individual parameters) in a simulated OHCA setting. Real-time feedback has the potential to improve manual ventilation quality and may allow providers to avoid harmful hyperventilation. [Abstract copyright: © 2021 The Authors.]
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number100082
    JournalResuscitation Plus
    Volume5
    Early online date30 Jan 2021
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Mar 2021

    Bibliographical note

    Note: This work was supported by the ZOLL Medical Corporation.

    Keywords

    • Cardiovascular medicine

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