1. Intraosseous access can be taught to medical students using the four-step approach
- Author
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Ask D. Kvisselgaard, Tobias Stenbjerg Lyngeraa, Monika Afzali, and Sandra Viggers
- Subjects
Medical education ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Students, Medical ,Objective structured clinical examination ,Resuscitation ,Denmark ,education ,Vascular access ,Anaesthesiology ,Pilot Projects ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,OSCE and checklist validity ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Cadaver ,Humans ,Intraosseous access ,Students medical ,Human cadaver ,Medicine(all) ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,General Medicine ,Infusions, Intraosseous ,Medical students ,Checklist ,Surgery ,Traumatology ,Physical therapy ,Emergency Medicine ,Clinical Competence ,Clinical competence ,business ,Kappa ,Research Article - Abstract
Background The intraosseous (IO) access is an alternative route for vascular access when peripheral intravascular catheterization cannot be obtained. In Denmark the IO access is reported as infrequently trained and used. The aim of this pilot study was to investigate if medical students can obtain competencies in IO access when taught by a modified Walker and Peyton’s four-step approach. Methods Nineteen students attended a human cadaver course in emergency procedures. A lecture was followed by a workshop. Fifteen students were presented with a case where IO access was indicated and their performance was evaluated by an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) and rated using a weighted checklist. To evaluate the validity of the checklist, three raters rated performance and Cohen’s kappa was performed to assess inter-rater reliability (IRR). To examine the strength of the overall IRR, Randolph’s free-marginal multi rater kappa was used. Results A maximum score of 15 points was obtained by nine (60%) of the participants and two participants (13%) scored 13 points with all three raters. Only one participant failed more than one item on the checklist. The expert rater rated lower with a mean score of 14.2 versus the non-expert raters with mean 14.6 and 14.3. The overall IRR calculated with Randolph’s free-marginal multi rater kappa was 0.71. Conclusion The essentials of the IO access procedure can be taught to medical students using a modified version of the Walker and Peyton’s four-step approach and the checklist used was found reliable.
- Published
- 2017