Applying Principles From Aviation Safety Investigations to Root Cause Analysis of a Critical Incident During a Simulated Emergency.

Simul Healthc

From the Department of Trauma and Orthopedic Surgery (S.I.), Cologne-Merheim Medical Center (CMMC), Private University of Witten/Herdecke, Cologne, North Rhine Westphalia; Institute for Emergency Medicine and Management in Medicine (INM) (S.I., A.Z., T.K., S.P., H.T.), University Hospital of Munich, Munich, Bavaria, Germany; and Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine (W.E.), Chicago, IL.

Published: June 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Safety investigations in aviation utilize structured techniques to analyze flight data and cockpit recordings in order to identify root causes of incidents.
  • Full-scale medical simulations, particularly during emergencies like cardiac arrests, can similarly reveal insights by recording treatment interventions and dialogues among EMS providers.
  • The analysis of these recordings highlighted issues such as faulty decision-making, loss of leadership, and automation bias, suggesting that using root cause analysis (RCA) during simulations can enhance EMS training and education.

Article Abstract

Safety investigations in aviation aim to identify potential root causes. They use structured techniques to analyze information from flight data and cockpit voice recorders. Full-scale medical simulations using audiovisual recordings provide similar possibilities. During a simulated cardiac arrest, an incident related to use of the defibrillator (automated external defibrillator) occurred with emergency medical services (EMS) providers. Treatment interventions and dialogs during the incident were extracted from audiovisual recordings and transferred into a transcript of events.Knowing indicated treatment measures, the team adhered to automated external defibrillator voice prompts rather than follow their own assessment. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation was on hold for 72% of the time. Time to first defibrillation was delayed by 2:17 minutes. Transcript allowed us to identify faulty decision-making, loss of leadership, and automation bias as possible root causes. Use of RCA methodology during medical simulation improves understanding of critical incidents and can contribute to training of EMS personnel and education of instructors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SIH.0000000000000457DOI Listing

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