학술논문

Simulation-Based Training of the Rapid Evaluation and Management of Acute Stroke (STREAM)—A Prospective Single-Arm Multicenter Trial
Document Type
article
Author
Ferdinand O. BohmannNatalia KurkaRichard du Mesnil de RochemontKatharina GruberJoachim GuentherPeter RostekHeike RaiPhilipp ZicklerMichael ErtlAnsgar BerlisSven PoliAnnerose MengelPeter RinglebSimon NagelJohannes PfaffFrank A. WollenweberLars KellertMoriz HerzbergLuzie KoehlerKarl Georg HaeuslerAnna AlegianiCharlotte SchubertCaspar BrekenfeldChristopher E. J. DopplerOezguer A. OnurChristoph KabbaschTanja ManserWaltraud PfeilschifterSTREAM Trial InvestigatorsMohammad AlotaibiAbdulAziz BatarfiAnnemarie BrandhofeRoxane-Isabelle KestnerJan Hendrik SchaeferMartin Alexander SchallerAlexander SeilerStephanie WallenweinLaurent M. WillemsHelmuth SteinmetzElke HattingenZeljko KosMarkus NaumannCorinna BlumPaula BombachJulia ZellerChristoph GumbingerJens RegulaSolveig HorstmannMiriam HeyseEva DorozewskiChristian HamentnerReiff TilmanSimon SchieberSibu MundiyanapurathSilvia SchönenbergerYahia MokliMarkus MöhlenbruchJan BewersdorfMaximilian EinhäuplKatharina FeilMatthias KleinKen MöhwaldKonstanze MühlbauerMathias MulazzaniGuido RohrerSonja SchöneckerFranziska DornPhilipp MennemeyerTorleif SandnerBrigitte HuberJulia HillJela GavranHeinrich AudebertRohat GeranJohannes SchurigJuliane HermFelix KleefeldKarl SchoknechtDenes JadrankaKirsten BradeTatjana WittenbergUlrich Mayer-RungeMaxim BesterMichael H SchönfeldFabian FlottmannLisa PrilopHannes LeischnerAndreas Maximilian FrölichSabine RoesnerGabriel BroocksUta HanningStephanie GuderMatthias BechsteinCarmen LangeSebastian KautzFocko L. HiggenAnna KyselyovaGötz ThomallaJens FiehlerGereon Rudolf FinkAnna BonkhoffJulian DronseKatharina KirschSarah LaurentBoris von ReuternJurij RosenLukas VolzJan-Michael WernerMichael WollringRobert SeligerAbdulkadir YildirimMarc SchlamannJan Borggrefe
Source
Frontiers in Neurology, Vol 10 (2019)
Subject
CRM
thrombolysis (tPA)
stroke
emergency care
simulation training
Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system
RC346-429
Language
English
ISSN
1664-2295
Abstract
Introduction: Acute stroke care delivered by interdisciplinary teams is time-sensitive. Simulation-based team training is a promising tool to improve team performance in medical operations. It has the potential to improve process times, team communication, patient safety, and staff satisfaction. We aim to assess whether a multi-level approach consisting of a stringent workflow revision based on peer-to-peer review and 2–3 one-day in situ simulation trainings can improve acute stroke care processing times in high volume neurocenters within a 6 months period.Methods and Analysis: The trial is being carried out in a pre-test-post-test design at 7 tertiary care university hospital neurocenters in Germany. The intervention is directed at the interdisciplinary multiprofessional stroke teams. Before and after the intervention, process times of all direct-to-center stroke patients receiving IV thrombolysis (IVT) and/or endovascular therapy (EVT) will be recorded. The primary outcome measure will be the “door-to-needle” time of all consecutive stroke patients directly admitted to the neurocenters who receive IVT. Secondary outcome measures will be intervention-related process times of the fraction of patients undergoing EVT and effects on team communication, perceived patient safety, and staff satisfaction via a staff questionnaire.Interventions: We are applying a multi-level intervention in cooperation with three “STREAM multipliers” from each center. First step is a central meeting of the multipliers at the sponsor's institution with the purposes of algorithm review in a peer-to-peer process that is recorded in a protocol and an introduction to the principles of simulation training and debriefing as well as crew resource management and team communication. Thereafter, the multipliers cooperate with the stroke team trainers from the sponsor's institution to plan and execute 2–3 one-day simulation courses in situ in the emergency department and CT room of the trial centers whereupon they receive teaching materials to perpetuate the trainings.Clinical Trial Registration: STREAM is a registered trial at https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03228251.