1. Whole-Process Emergency Training of Personal Protective Equipment Helps Healthcare Workers Against COVID-19
- Author
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Yijing Yang, Xinglong Yang, Caizhong Zhu, Yuying Ye, Cheng Zhen, Wenhui Tan, Junyuan Tan, Zhu Chen, and Dong Chen
- Subjects
Male ,Program evaluation ,China ,Models, Educational ,Education, Continuing ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Process (engineering) ,Pneumonia, Viral ,education ,Control (management) ,Tertiary Care Centers ,Betacoronavirus ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Pandemics ,Personal Protective Equipment ,Simulation Training ,Personal protective equipment ,Infection Control ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,medicine.disease ,030210 environmental & occupational health ,Personnel, Hospital ,Workflow ,Scale (social sciences) ,Female ,Clinical Competence ,Medical emergency ,Coronavirus Infections ,business ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To develop an emergency training program of personal protective equipment (PPE) for general healthcare workers (HCWs) who may be under the threat of Corona Virus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) and evaluate the effect of the program. METHODS: A three-stage training program was designed. The complete clinical workflow together with infectious disease ward was simulated. To verify the effect of the program, an experimental training with pre- and post-test was conducted before large-scale training. RESULTS: Post-test scores were significantly improved when compared with the pre-test scores. Among all PPE, N95 respirator and protective coverall needed training most. Meanwhile, "proficiency level" and "mutual check & help" also needed to be strengthened as independent scoring points. CONCLUSION: This training program significantly improved the performances of participants. It may therefore be applied for general HCWs on a larger scale.
- Published
- 2020