Newsletter 2022
How to optimise the execution of emergency procedures?
Result of an interdisciplinary study supported by European Scientific Societies
Prof. Jean-Michel Constantin, Virginie Delplanque, Xavier Delplanque
A collective supported by ESAIC and in partnership with two French scientific societies, the Société Française d’Anesthésie-Réanimation (SFAR) and the French Society of Emergency Medicine (SFMU), has just published an independent and international study report.
This international study aimed to answer the following question: How to facilitate the execution of emergency procedures in healthcare?
At stake: Increasing the quality of patient care worldwide.
Over 180 respondents in 20 countries enabled to identify two key opportunities: “Making teamwork simpler and more efficient” and “Increasing the frequency and quality of ongoing education”.
Let’s go back to the approach, the results and the solutions in mind.
An initiative started in the midst of the covid crisis
It was in September 2021 that the idea for this study was born. While in France, practitioners were understaffed due to budget limitations, sick leave, even burnout, and at the same time faced a very large volume of patients to be treated, Professor Jean-Michel Constantin, Virginie Delplanque and Xavier Delplanque decided to launch this study. The approach, which is completely independent, aimed to conduct a multi-sector study at an international scale with the idea of proposing collaborative solutions. Interested in the approach, the SFAR and the SFMU quickly decided to become partners and ESAIC offered the team of three to publish an article about this research in their newsletter.
From aeronautics to health: 50 years of Crisis Resource Management
The research team decided to start the study by talking individually with ten French airplane pilots and instructors. The objective at this stage was to know the state of the art of training and practice in aeronautics, a sector which for half a century has inspired the healthcare sector.
Today, 9 months later and thanks to the active support of ESAIC, SFAR, SFMU, the research team publishes its report.
The two key opportunities on an international scale: making teamwork simpler and more efficient and increasing the frequency and quality of ongoing education
Following individual interviews with 40 international caregivers and the participation of 181 healthcare professionals at the online survey, two closely related opportunities emerge: “Making teamwork simpler and more effective” appears to be the priority and common issue on an international scale. The key to success is based on good coordination, and in particular speed of execution between the various practitioners involved in the emergency procedure. This coordination is itself conditioned by frequent and quality continuous training, fully integrating simulation (training and rehearsal on a mannequin before executing on a patient).
At an international level, native practitioners from Latin countries and AMEA (Africa – Middle East – Asia) mention a crucial need to increase the frequency and quality of continuing education, even more so than Anglo-Saxons.
Challenge: How to ensure the same quality of care everywhere and anytime in Europe thanks to an evolution of ongoing training?
The above question is key. We all know that the Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Emergency departments must ensure continuous care, 24/7, with patients who sometimes have a life-threatening condition.
We all know that to do so, these departments have a high and frequent turnover of team members due to on-call duty, sick leaves, burn out or even resignations…
Physicians, nurses, paramedics in these services must be able to work effectively together, sometimes without knowing each other and sometimes during long shifts. The keystone of efficient coordination is regular and qualitative ongoing training in order to optimise the quality of care.
An innovative training concept, integrated into a co-constructed digital tool and being tested this summer in France
In response to this problem, the initiating team of the study is co-developing an innovative solution offering a training triptych of individual and collective modules within a mobile and web application. The results of the tests of this prototype, carried out during the summer in France with French and international trainers and learners, in partnership with the SFAR and the SFMU, will be made public in the autumn. More details about the ESAIC role in this project will come later on.
In the meantime, we invite you to read the international report, that you can download for free on this Website.
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