AI Article Synopsis

  • Circumferential deep burns can create a dangerous constrictive effect on limbs, requiring a time-sensitive procedure called escharotomy, which is not currently taught effectively in formal education.
  • A study was conducted with surgical trainees in Wales to assess a new education package that included hands-on workshops with a realistic simulation model to teach escharotomy technique.
  • After the course, participants reported significant increases in their confidence levels regarding performing the procedure, indicating the effectiveness of the training, and future efforts will aim to validate these results with more trainees.

Article Abstract

Background: Circumferential deep burns on the limb lead to a constrictive, tourniquet-like effect causing critical limb ischaemia. The treatment, escharotomy, is a time-critical procedure that sometimes is required before the patient arrives at a burn centre. At present, no practical method of teaching this procedure is incorporated into formal educational courses.

Methods: The feasibility of a comprehensive education package to teach upper limb escharotomy was assessed in a group of plastic and general surgery trainees in Wales. Small group workshops focused on the clinical presentation of patients requiring escharotomy. Participants then executed this on a custom-made high-fidelity simulation upper limb model. The articulated limb has subcutaneous silicone fat which bulges upon decompression and a finger-tip which turns pink indicating satisfactory reperfusion. A before and after five-point Likert scale was used to evaluate changes in participants' self-assessed confidence in the surgical management of escharotomy. Statistical significance between scores was assessed using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test.

Results: A total of 34 participants took part. Following completion of the course, general surgery trainees' confidence in executing the procedure increased from a median score of 1.00 "not confident at all" (IQR 1.00-2.00) to 4.00 "fairly confident" (IQR 4.00-5.00, p < 0.01). Plastic surgery trainees' confidence increased from a median score of was 3.00 "somewhat confident" (IQR 1.75-4.00) to 4.00 "fairly confident" (IQR 3.00-4.25, p < 0.01).

Discussion: We developed a comprehensive simulator course that has been demonstrated to improve candidate's confidence in performing escharotomy. The next stage in the course development is to confirm the results in a larger cohort. By developing this simulator course we aim to improve emergency burn care education in the UK and globally.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.burns.2022.05.017DOI Listing

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