AI Article Synopsis

  • The increase in ECMO use has highlighted concerns about how well perfusion education programs prepare students for ECMO responsibilities, pointed out by the lack of standardized training.
  • A study assessed three different curricular strategies to determine their effectiveness in helping new perfusion graduates pass the Adult ECMO Specialist Certification exam (CES-A), hypothesizing no significant difference between groups.
  • Results showed all groups passed the exam, but those who completed the ECMO Capstone experience scored higher overall and on specific exam categories compared to graduates from programs with no formal ECMO training.

Article Abstract

The dramatic increase in the use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) over the last decade with the concomitant need for ECMO competent perfusionists has raised questions of how well perfusion education programs are preparing entry-level perfusionists to participate in ECMO. While all perfusion schools teach ECMO principles, there is no standardized or systematic approach to the delivery of didactic knowledge and clinical skills in ECMO. Given this variability of ECMO education across and within perfusion schools, the CES-A exam may provide a metric for comparing curricular approaches. The purpose of this study is to examine three different curricular approaches to prepare new perfusion graduates to master the Adult ECMO Specialist Certification exam (CES-A). We examined three different curricular approaches to prepare new perfusion graduates to master the Adult ECMO Specialist Certification exam (CES-A). We hypothesized that there would be no difference in CES-A pass rate, exam score, Rasch measure, and item category scores between SUNY Cardiovascular Perfusion Program (CVP) graduates who completed SUNY's ECMO Capstone experience (Group III) and CVP graduates who did not select the ECMO Capstone experience (Group II). Further, we studied the performance of a third group of new graduates from an external program that does not offer formal ECMO courses or an ECMO Capstone experience (Group I). Every perfusion graduate in all groups passed the adult ECMO specialist exam. The graduates who as students completed an ECMO Capstone experience (Group III) scored higher on the exam and significantly higher on four exam categories: coagulation and hemostasis ( = .058), lab analysis point of care ( = .035), and monitor patient and circuit ( = .073), and the safety and failure modes ( = .017). Overall the median graduate Rasch measures ranked with Group III demonstrating the highest measure to Group I the lowest measures (not significant at  = .085). There is a positive educational effect due to CVP graduates completion of the ECMO Capstone experience compared to the program standard ECMO-related curricula in the two perfusion programs participating in this study. From this observation a structured ECMO simulation-based program appears to be equally effective as a traditional, typical lecture-only, clinical perfusion preceptorship, while demonstrating a more satisfactory experience with a higher reported case experience. In this study the standard perfusionist education curriculum prepared the new graduate to be successful on the CES-A exam. The three curricular approaches appear to prepare perfusionist graduates to be successful on the Adult ECMO Specialist exam.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8717719PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/ject-2100008DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ecmo specialist
20
ecmo capstone
20
capstone experience
20
ecmo
18
three curricular
16
curricular approaches
16
adult ecmo
16
experience group
16
cvp graduates
12
group iii
12

Similar Publications

Mechanical Circulatory support for Septic Shock in Children and Adults: Different but Similar!

Can J Cardiol

December 2024

Senior Consultant Intensive Care, Royal Childrens Hospital, Melbourne, Australia; Professor Department of Critical Care, Faculty of Medicine, Melbourne University.

Whilst Extra-Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) for circulatory support in patients with severe septic shock, commenced in newborn infants and children in the late 1980's, ECMO has remained a controversial treatment for adults with refractory septic shock (RSS). This is fundamentally due to differences in the predominant hemodynamic response to sepsis. In newborn infants and very young children ventricular failure called Low Cardiac Output Syndrome (LCOS) is the major hemodynamic response whilst adolescents and adults have mainly vasoplegic shock.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Fast and the Frivolous: Does Prehospital ECPR's "need for speed" provide enough "bang for the buck"?

Resuscitation

December 2024

Adjunct Clinical Associate Professor, School of Public Health and Preventative Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia; Senior Intensivist and Deputy Director of Intensive Care, Alfred Health, Melbourne, Australia; ECMO Specialist, Victorian ECMO Service, Melbourne, Australia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for patients with electrical storm or refractory ventricular arrhythmias: Management and outcomes.

Can J Cardiol

December 2024

Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; Peter Munk Cardiac Centre, Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network, Toronto, Canada. Electronic address:

Patients on veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO) are at high risk for ventricular arrhythmias due to derangements in myocardial perfusion, hemodynamics, and heightened catecholamine states. Existing data on the management and outcomes of patients with electrical storm or refractory ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation (VT/VF) treated with VA-ECMO are primarily derived from retrospective observational studies. Typical survival rates are in the range of 40-50%, with 15-20% of patients undergoing VT ablation and 30-40% of patients requiring advanced heart failure therapies (cardiac transplant or durable left ventricular assist device).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!