Visual Fixation on the Thorax Predicts Bystander Breathing Detection in Simulated Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest, but Video Debriefing With Eye Tracking Gaze Overlay Does Not Enhance Postallocation Success Rate: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Introduction Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is associated with higher survival rates. Even trained health care staff cannot assess breathing well enough to detect cardiac arrest. Recognition of cardiac arrest by lay rescuers might be overlooked in adult basic life support resuscitation guidelines, which explain what to do, but not how to do it. The 2015 Adult Advanced Life Support Resuscitation Guidelines recommend to “look for chest movement.” We hypothesize (1) that instructing lay rescuers to look for chest movement allows detecting breathing (or lack thereof); (2) that showing a person their own recorded gaze overlay during a video debriefing intervention enhances breathing detection at postallocation; and (3) that the more time spent looking at a cardiac arrest victim's chest, the greater the probability of detecting breathing (or lack thereof). Methods Monocentric, blinded, prospective, 2-arm parallel randomized controlled trial with balanced randomization (1:1). The design entailed a preallocation simulation, an intervention (video debriefing with or without gaze overlay), and a postallocation simulation. A follow-up simulation took place after 6 months. The main outcome measured was success in detecting breathing. Participants were all prospective students of a bachelor's degree program in nursing. Results All participants performed better at postallocation (success rate at preallocation = 59%, postalloc...
Source: Simulation in Healthcare: The Journal of the Society for Simulation in Healthcare - Category: Medical Devices Tags: Empirical Investigations Source Type: research