57 results on '"Cicero MX"'
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2. Impact of an educational intervention on residents' knowledge of pediatric disaster medicine.
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Cicero MX, Blake E, Gallant N, Chen L, Esposito L, Guerrero M, and Baum CR
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- 2009
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3. Pediatric disaster preparedness: best planning for the worst-case scenario.
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Cicero MX and Baum CR
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- 2008
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4. The 2006-2007 PEMpix photo competition award winner: Mark Cicero, MD: Rash decisions: acute hemorrhagic edema of infancy in a 7-month-old boy.
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Cicero MX
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- 2008
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5. Calculating the cost of smoking.
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Cicero MX
- Published
- 2009
6. Planning for Children in Disasters: Education and Strategies for the Best Outcomes.
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Cicero MX, Davis NR, Henning AM, and Krug S
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Conflict-of-Interest Disclosures: Mark X. Cicero reports service as a medical officer of the Health Resources and Services Administration via an Intergovernmental Personnel Act. Nichole R. Davis reports receiving grant funding from the Health Resources and Services Administration and the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response. Steven Krug reports receiving funding support from the Health Resources Services Administration for participation in the Pediatric Pandemic Network and funding from the Administration for Strategic Planning and Response for participation in the Region V for Kids Disaster Center of Excellence; receiving travel reimbursement from the American Academy of Pediatrics for a leadership role within the Council on Children and Disasters and as the AAP’s specialty advisor to the American Medical Association RPRVS Update Committee; and serving as a voting member on the Pediatric Advisory Committee of the Food and Drug Administration.
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- 2024
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7. Frequency, Type, and Degree of Potential Harm of Adverse Safety Events among Pediatric Emergency Medical Services Encounters.
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Cicero MX, Baird J, Brown L, Auerbach M, and Adelgais K
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- Humans, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Child, Preschool, Infant, Adolescent, Female, Male, Infant, Newborn, Patient Safety, Medical Errors statistics & numerical data, Rhode Island epidemiology, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Only 5-10% of emergency medical services (EMS) patients are children, and most pediatric encounters are low-acuity. EMS chart review has been used to identify adverse safety events (ASEs) in high-acuity and high-risk pediatric encounters. The objective of this work was to evaluate the frequency, type, and potential harm of ASEs in varied acuity pediatric EMS encounters., Methods: This cross-sectional study evaluated pediatric (ages 0-18 years) prehospital records from 15 EMS agencies among three states (Colorado, Connecticut, and Rhode Island) between November 2019 and October 2021. Research associates used a previously validated tool to analyze electronic EMS and hospital records. Adverse safety events were recorded in six care categories, grouped into four levels for analysis: assessment/diagnosis/clinical decision-making, procedures, medication administration (including O
2 ), and fluid administration, and defined across five types of ASEs: Unintended injuries or consequences, Near misses, Suboptimal actions, Errors, and Management complications (UNSEMs). Type and frequency of ASEs in each category were rated in three harm severities: Harm Unlikely, Mild/Temporary, or Permanent/Severe. Three physicians verified ASEs determined by research associates. Frequency of ASEs and harm likelihood are reported., Results: Records for 508 EMS patients were reviewed, with 63 (12.4%) transported using lights and sirens. At least one clinical intervention beyond assessment/diagnosis/clinical decision-making was documented for 183 (36.1%, 95% CI: 31.8, 40.4) patients. A total of 162 ASEs were identified for 112 patients (22.1%, 95% CI: 18.5, 25.7). Suboptimal actions were the most frequent UNSEM ( n = 66, 40.7%; 95% CI: 33.1, 48.3). For ASEs, ( n = 162), the most frequent associations were with procedures 39.5% (95% CI: 32.0, 47.0) or assessment/diagnosis/clinical decision making, 32.1%, (95% CI: 24.9, 39.3). Among care categories, fluid administration was associated with significantly more UNSEMs (58.1%, 95% CI:53.8, 62.4). Most ASEs were determined to be 'Harm Unlikely' 62.4% (95% CI: 54.4, 70.4), with assessment/diagnosis/clinical decision making having significantly fewer ASEs with documented harm (22.4%, 95% CI: 10.7, 34.1) compared to other care categories., Conclusion: Over 20% of pediatric EMS encounters had an identified ASE, and most were unlikely to cause harm. Most frequent ASEs were likely to be associated with procedures and assessment/diagnosis/clinical decision-making.- Published
- 2024
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8. The Challenge of Mass Casualty Incident Response Simulation Exercise Design and Creation: A Modified Delphi Study.
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Weinstein ES, Bortolin M, Lamine H, Herbert TL, Hubloue I, Pauwels S, Burke RV, Cicero MX, Dugas POT, Oduwole EO, Ragazzoni L, and Della Corte F
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- Humans, Consensus, Delphi Technique, Exercise, Emergency Responders, Mass Casualty Incidents
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Background: A Mass Casualty Incident response (MCI) full scale exercise (FSEx) assures MCI first responder (FR) competencies. Simulation and serious gaming platforms (Simulation) have been considered to achieve and maintain FR competencies. The translational science (TS) T0 question was asked: how can FRs achieve similar MCI competencies as a FSEx through the use of MCI simulation exercises?, Methods: T1 stage (Scoping Review): PRISMA-ScR was conducted to develop statements for the T2 stage modified Delphi (mD) study. 1320 reference titles and abstracts were reviewed with 215 full articles progressing for full review leading to 97 undergoing data extraction.T2 stage (mD study): Selected experts were presented with 27 statements derived from T1 data with instruction to rank each statement on a 7-point linear numeric scale, where 1 = disagree and 7 = agree. Consensus amongst experts was defined as a standard deviation ≤ 1.0., Results: After 3 mD rounds, 19 statements attained consensus and 8 did not attain consensus., Conclusions: MCI simulation exercises can be developed to achieve similar competencies as FSEx by incorporating the 19 statements that attained consensus through the TS stages of a scoping review (T1) and mD study (T2), and continuing to T3 implementation, and then T4 evaluation stages.
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- 2023
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9. An Evaluation of Prehospital Adenosine Use.
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Nelson AR, Cone DC, Aydin A, Burns K, Cicero MX, Couturier K, Rollins M, Shapiro M, and Joseph D
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- Humans, Child, Adenosine, Retrospective Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Prospective Studies, Atrial Fibrillation, Emergency Medical Services, Tachycardia, Supraventricular diagnosis
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Background: Adenosine has been safely used by paramedics for the treatment of stable supraventricular tachycardia since the mid-1990s. However, there continues to be variability in paramedics' ability to identify appropriate indications for adenosine administration. As the first of a planned series of studies aimed at improving the accuracy of SVT diagnosis and successful administration of adenosine by paramedics, this study details the current usage patterns of adenosine by paramedics., Methods: This cross-sectional retrospective study investigated adenosine use within a large northeast EMS region from January 1, 2019, through September 30, 2021. Excluding pediatric and duplicate case reports, we created a dataset containing patient age, sex, and vital signs before, during, and after adenosine administration; intravenous line location; and coded medical history from paramedic narrative documentation, including a history of atrial fibrillation, suspected arrhythmia diagnosis, and effect of adenosine. In cases with available prehospital electrocardiograms (EKGs) for review, two physicians independently coded the arrhythmia diagnosis and outcome of adenosine administration. Statistical analysis included interrater reliability with Cohen's kappa statistic., Results: One hundred eighty-three cases were included for final analysis, 84 did not have a documented EKG for review. Categorization of presenting rhythms in these cases occurred by a physician reviewing EMS narrative and documentation. Forty of these 84 cases (48%) were adjudicated as SVT likely, 32 (38%) as SVT unlikely and 12 (14%) as uncategorized due to lack of supporting documentation. Of the 99 cases with EKGs available to review, there was substantial agreement of arrhythmia diagnosis interpretation between physician reviewers (Cohen's kappa 0.77-1.0); 54 cases were adjudicated as SVT by two physician reviewers. Other identified cardiac rhythms included atrial fibrillation (16), sinus tachycardia (11), and ventricular tachycardia (2). Adenosine cardioversion occurred in 47 of the 99 cases with EKGs available for physician review (47.5%). Adenosine cardioversion was also deemed to occur in 87% (47/54) of cases when the EKG rhythm was physician adjudicated SVT., Conclusions: This study supports the use of adenosine as a prehospital treatment for SVT while highlighting the need for continued efforts to improve paramedics' identification and management of tachyarrhythmias.
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- 2023
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10. Mass Shooting Drills Are Not the Best Shield for Our Hospitals or Our Children.
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Cicero MX and Scherzer DJ
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- Child, Humans, Hospitals, Mass Casualty Incidents, Disaster Planning
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- 2022
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11. Emergency Medical Services Provider Acceptance of and Attitudes About Pediatric SimBox Simulations.
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Cicero MX, Baird J, Adelgais K, Brown L, and Auerbach M
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- Child, Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Allied Health Personnel, Surveys and Questionnaires, Emergency Medical Technicians, Emergency Medical Services
- Abstract
Objective: SimBox simulations allow for high-frequency open-access health care education, overcoming cost and resource barriers. Prehospital paramedics and emergency medical technician (EMT) care for children infrequently. In this study, prehospital providers evaluated pediatric SimBox simulations., Methods: This was a cross-sectional study of EMS professionals participating in a series of simulations conducted in a larger project assessing improvement of the quality of pediatric care in the prehospital setting. Participants were teams of two, which comprised a paramedic/paramedic, paramedic/EMT, or 2 EMTs. The simulations used facilitator resources, debriefing prompts, video depictions of patients and vital signs, and a low-fidelity manikin. Pediatric emergency care coordinators, EMS training officers, and/or emergency physicians facilitated simulations of seizure, sepsis with respiratory failure, and child abuse, followed by debriefings. Participants completed an online survey after the simulation and rated it in 4 domains: prebriefing, scenario content, debriefing, and overall. Ratings were trifold: "strongly agree," "somewhat agree," or "do not agree." Data were analyzed by case type, participant type, location, participant reaction to simulation elements, and the debriefing. Net Promoter Scores were calculated to assess participant endorsement of SimBox., Results: There were 121 participants: 103 (87%) were paramedics, and 18 (13%) were EMTs. Participant agreement of simulation benefit for clinical practice was high, for example, "I am more confident in my ability to prioritize care and interventions" (98.4% strongly or somewhat agree), and 99.2% of participants agreed the postsimulation debriefing with facilitators "provided opportunities to self-reflect on my performance during simulation." Overall, 97.5% strongly or somewhat agreed that the simulations "improved my comfort in pediatric acute care." Net Promoter Score showed 65.3% were promoters of and 24% were passive about SimBox., Conclusion: SimBox simulations are associated with improved self-efficacy of prehospital care providers for care of acutely ill or injured children. The majority promotes SimBox as a learning tool., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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12. Efficacy of Computer-Based Simulation as a Modality for Learning Pediatric Disaster Triage for Pediatric Emergency Nurses.
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Levy AR, Khalil E, Chandramohan M, Whitfill TM, and Cicero MX
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- Child, Computers, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Patient Simulation, Mass Casualty Incidents, Triage
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Summary Statement: Pediatric disaster triage (PDT) is challenging for healthcare personnel. Mistriage can lead to poor resource utilization. In contrast to live simulation, screen-based simulation is more reproducible and less costly. We hypothesized that the screen-based simulation "60 Seconds to Survival" (60S) to learning PDT will be associated with improved triage accuracy for pediatric emergency nursing personnel.During this prospective observational study, 138 nurse participants at 2 tertiary care emergency departments were required to play 60S at least 5 times over 13 weeks. Efficacy was assessed by measuring the learners' triage accuracy, mistriage, and simulated patient outcomes using JumpStart.Triage accuracy improved from a median of 61.1 [interquartile range (IQR) = 48.5-72.0] to 91.7 (IQR = 60.4-95.8, P < 0.0001), whereas mistriage decreased from 38.9 (IQR = 28.0-51.5) to 8.3 (IQR = 4.2-39.6, P < 0.0001), demonstrating a significant improvement in accuracy and decrease in mistriage. Screen-based simulation 60S is an effective modality for learning PDT by pediatric emergency nurses., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Society for Simulation in Healthcare.)
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- 2022
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13. Inter-Rater Reliability and Agreement Among Mass-Casualty Incident Algorithms Using a Pediatric Trauma Dataset: A Pilot Study.
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Fisher EH, Claudius I, Kaji AH, Shaban A, McGlynn N, Cicero MX, Santillanes G, Gausche-Hill M, Chang TP, and Donofrio-Odmann JJ
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- Algorithms, Child, Humans, Pilot Projects, Reproducibility of Results, Triage methods, Mass Casualty Incidents
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Introduction: Many triage algorithms exist for use in mass-casualty incidents (MCIs) involving pediatric patients. Most of these algorithms have not been validated for reliability across users., Study Objective: Investigators sought to compare inter-rater reliability (IRR) and agreement among five MCI algorithms used in the pediatric population., Methods: A dataset of 253 pediatric (<14 years of age) trauma activations from a Level I trauma center was used to obtain prehospital information and demographics. Three raters were trained on five MCI triage algorithms: Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment (START) and JumpSTART, as appropriate for age (combined as J-START); Sort Assess Life-Saving Intervention Treatment (SALT); Pediatric Triage Tape (PTT); CareFlight (CF); and Sacco Triage Method (STM). Patient outcomes were collected but not available to raters. Each rater triaged the full set of patients into Green, Yellow, Red, or Black categories with each of the five MCI algorithms. The IRR was reported as weighted kappa scores with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Descriptive statistics were used to describe inter-rater and inter-MCI algorithm agreement., Results: Of the 253 patients, 247 had complete triage assignments among the five algorithms and were included in the study. The IRR was excellent for a majority of the algorithms; however, J-START and CF had the highest reliability with a kappa 0.94 or higher (0.9-1.0, 95% CI for overall weighted kappa). The greatest variability was in SALT among Green and Yellow patients. Overall, J-START and CF had the highest inter-rater and inter-MCI algorithm agreements., Conclusion: The IRR was excellent for a majority of the algorithms. The SALT algorithm, which contains subjective components, had the lowest IRR when applied to this dataset of pediatric trauma patients. Both J-START and CF demonstrated the best overall reliability and agreement.
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- 2022
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14. State emergency medical services guidance and protocol changes in response to the COVID-19 pandemic: A national investigation.
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Owusu-Ansah S, Harris M, Fishe JN, Adelgais K, Panchal A, Lyng JW, McCans K, Alter R, Perry A, Cercone A, Hendry P, and Cicero MX
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Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic has had an impact on emergency medical services (EMS) and its guidelines, which aid in patient care. This study characterizes state and territory EMS office recommendations to EMS statewide operational and clinical guidelines and describes the mechanisms of distribution and implementation during the COVID-19 pandemic., Methods: A mixed-methods study was conducted in 2 phases. In phase 1, changes and development of COVID-19 guidance and protocols for EMS clinical management and operations were identified among 50 states, the District of Columbia, and 5 territories in publicly available online documents and information. In phase 2, structured interviews were conducted with state/territory EMS officials to confirm the protocol changes or guidance and assess dissemination and implementation strategies for COVID-19., Results: In phase 1, publicly available online documents for 52 states/territories regarding EMS protocols and COVID-19 guidance were identified and reviewed. Of 52 (33/52) states/territories, 33 had either formal protocol changes or specific guidance for the pandemic. In phase 2, 2 state and territory EMS officials were interviewed regarding their protocols or guidance for COVID-19 and the dissemination and implementation practices they used to reach EMS agencies (response rate = 65%). Of the 34 state/territory officials interviewed, 22 had publicly available online COVID-19 protocols or guidance. Of the 22 officials with online COVID-19 protocols, all reported providing operational direction, and 19 of 22 officials reported providing clinical direction., Conclusions: Most states provided guidance to EMS agencies and/or updated protocols in response to the COVID-19 pandemic., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (© 2022 The Authors. JACEP Open published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Emergency Physicians.)
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- 2022
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15. Sound and Air: Ultrasonographic Measurements of Pediatric Chest Wall Thickness and Implications for Needle Decompression of Tension Pneumothorax.
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Hossain R, Qadri U, Dembowski N, Garcia A, Chen L, Cicero MX, and Riera A
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- Adult, Child, Decompression, Surgical, Humans, Needles, Reproducibility of Results, Thoracostomy, Pneumothorax diagnostic imaging, Pneumothorax surgery, Thoracic Wall diagnostic imaging, Thoracic Wall surgery
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Objectives: Needle decompression is potentially life-saving in cases of tension pneumothorax. Although Advanced Trauma Life Support recommends an 8-cm needle for decompression for adults, no detailed pediatric guidelines exist, specifically regarding needle length or site of decompression., Methods: Point-of-care ultrasound was used to measure chest wall thickness (CWT), the distance between skin and pleural line, bilaterally at the second intercostal midclavicular line and the fourth intercostal anterior axillary line in children of various ages and sizes. Patients were grouped based on Broselow tape weight categories. Measurements were compared between left versus right sides at the 2 anatomic sites. Interclass correlation coefficients were calculated to assess for interrater reliability., Results: A convenience sample of 163 patients from our emergency department was enrolled. For patients who fit into Broselow tape categories, CWT at the second intercostal midclavicular line ranged from 1.11 to 1.91 cm and at the fourth intercostal anterior axillary line ranged from 1.13 to 1.92 cm. In patients larger than the largest Broselow category, 77% had a CWT less than the length of a standard 1.25-in (3.175 cm) catheter. There were no significant differences in the measurements of CWT based on laterality nor anatomic site., Conclusions: The standard 1.25-in (3.175 cm) catheters are sufficient to treat most tension pneumothoraces in pediatric patients., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2020 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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16. Comparison of Outcome Tools Used to Test Mass-Casualty Algorithms in the Pediatric Population.
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Donofrio JJ, Shaban A, Kaji AH, Santillanes G, Cicero MX, Chang TP, Gausche-Hill M, and Claudius IA
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- Algorithms, Child, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Trauma Centers, Triage, Mass Casualty Incidents
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Introduction: Mass-casualty incident (MCI) algorithms are used to sort large numbers of patients rapidly into four basic categories based on severity. To date, there is no consensus on the best method to test the accuracy of an MCI algorithm in the pediatric population, nor on the agreement between different tools designed for this purpose., Study Objective: This study is to compare agreement between the Criteria Outcomes Tool (COT) to previously published outcomes tools in assessing the triage category applied to a simulated set of pediatric MCI patients., Methods: An MCI triage category (black, red, yellow, and green) was applied to patients from a pre-collected retrospective cohort of pediatric patients under 14 years of age brought in as a trauma activation to a Level I trauma center from July 2010 through November 2013 using each of the following outcome measures: COT, modified Baxt score, modified Baxt combined with mortality and/or length-of-stay (LOS), ambulatory status, mortality alone, and Injury Severity Score (ISS). Descriptive statistics were applied to determine agreement between tools., Results: A total of 247 patients were included, ranging from 25 days to 13 years of age. The outcome of mortality had 100% agreement with the COT black. The "modified Baxt positive and alive" outcome had the highest agreement with COT red (65%). All yellow outcomes had 47%-53% agreement with COT yellow. "Modified Baxt negative and <24 hours LOS" had the highest agreement with the COT green at 89%., Conclusions: Assessment of algorithms for triaging pediatric MCI patients is complicated by the lack of a gold standard outcome tool and variability between existing measures.
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- 2021
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17. Prehospital Disaster Triage Does Not Predict Pediatric Outcomes: Comparing the Criteria Outcomes Tool to Three Mass-Casualty Incident Triage Algorithms.
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Cicero MX, Santillanes GR, Cross KP, Kaji AH, and Donofrio JJ
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- Algorithms, Child, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hospitalization, Humans, Triage, Disaster Planning, Emergency Medical Services, Mass Casualty Incidents
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Introduction: It remains unclear which mass-casualty incident (MCI) triage tool best predicts outcomes for child disaster victims., Study Objectives: The primary objective of this study was to compare triage outcomes of Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment (START), modified START, and CareFlight in pediatric patients to an outcomes-based gold standard using the Criteria Outcomes Tool (COT). The secondary outcomes were sensitivity, specificity, under-triage, over-triage, and overall accuracy at each level for each MCI triage algorithm., Methods: Singleton trauma patients under 16 years of age with complete prehospital, emergency department (ED), and in-patient data were identified in the 2007-2009 National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB). The COT outcomes and procedures were translated into ICD-9 procedure codes with added timing criteria. Gold standard triage levels were assigned using the COT based on outcomes, including mortality, injury type, admission to the hospital, and surgical procedures. Comparison triage levels were determined based on algorithmic depictions of the three MCI triage tools., Results: A total of 31,093 patients with complete data were identified from the NTDB. The COT was applied to these patients, and the breakdown of gold standard triage levels, based on their actual clinical outcomes, was: 17,333 (55.7%) GREEN; 11,587 (37.3%) YELLOW; 1,572 (5.1%) RED; and 601 (1.9%) BLACK. CareFlight had the best sensitivity for predicting COT outcomes for BLACK (83% [95% confidence interval, 80%-86%]) and GREEN patients (79% [95% CI, 79%-80%]) and the best specificity for RED patients (89% [95% CI, 89%-90%])., Conclusion: Among three prehospital MCI triage tools, CareFlight had the best performance for correlating with outcomes in the COT. Overall, none of three tools had good test characteristics for predicting pediatric patient needs for surgical procedures or hospital admission.
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- 2021
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18. Modified Delphi Method Derivation of the FAMILY (Family Assessment of Medical Interventions & Liaisons with the Young) EMS Instrument.
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Cicero MX, Brown L, Auerbach M, Baird J, and Adelgais K
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- Allied Health Personnel, Child, Colorado, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Emergency Medical Services, Emergency Medical Technicians
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Background: Though family satisfaction with prehospital care is a surrogate for quality and patient outcomes, there are no tools available to measure family satisfaction., Objective: To develop the EMS Family Assessment of Medical Interventions & Liaisons with the Young (FAMILY) instrument., Methods: Components of family experiences with pediatric prehospital care were identified with a modified Delphi method. The expert panel included Emergency Medical Technicians, paramedics, family representatives, and EMS leaders from Colorado, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. An online survey was used to assess proposed questions from each of five candidate domains from national guidelines, including Safety, Communication, Family Presence, Cultural Awareness, Children with Special Healthcare Needs and Overall Satisfaction. Round-1 items were scored on a five-point Likert scale. Inclusion in the final instrument required 70% agreement ranking items as " include " or " definitely include ." In Round-2, participants assessed proposed refinements. This resulted in FAMILY Version-1, with sections for family members and EMS care providers. EMSC Family Action Network (FAN) representatives evaluated the FAMILY, leading to Version-2. Suggestions from the national FAN about content, clarity, and whether the instrument captured their experiences with pediatric EMS care led to the final FAMILY version. Bilingual speakers translated the instrument into Spanish, while assessing the content for semantic, idiomatic, experiential, and conceptual equivalence between the English and Spanish versions., Results: There were 22 experts in Round-1, and 20 continued into Round-2 .The Delphi process yielded 12 questions in six domains with 14 recommended modifications. Two questions were excluded. Five domains reached 70% agreement in Round-1. Cultural Awareness reached 75% agreement after Round-2. Six FAN representatives evaluated Version-1, leading to changes for clarity, content and cultural sensitivity. Seventeen FAN representatives evaluated Version-2 leading to additional refinement. The assessment of the equivalence between the English and Spanish survey versions resulted in changes in the Spanish language content for equivalent meaning., Conclusion: A panel of EMS and family stakeholders successfully developed an instrument to assess family satisfaction with pediatric EMS care. Further validation is required in a large respondent population. Assessing family satisfaction with pediatric EMS encounters is an important step toward improving prehospital care.
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- 2021
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19. Improving Pediatric Administrative Disaster Preparedness Through Simulated Disaster Huddles.
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Gross IT, Goldberg SA, Whitfill T, Liebling S, Garcia A, Alfano A, Hasdianda A, and Cicero MX
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- Child, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Inservice Training, Disaster Planning, Mass Casualty Incidents
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Members of an emergency department (ED) staff need to be prepared for mass casualty incidents (MCIs) at all times. Didactic sessions, drills, and functional exercises have shown to be effective, but it is challenging to find time and resources for appropriate training. We conducted brief, task-specific drills (deemed "disaster huddles") in a pediatric ED (PED) to examine if such an approach could be an alternative or supplement to traditional MCI training paradigms. Over the course of the study, we observed an improving trend in the overall score for administrative disaster preparedness. Disaster huddles may be an effective way to improve administrative disaster preparedness in the PED. Low-effort, low-time commitment education could be an attractive way for further disaster preparedness efforts. Further studies are indicated to show a potential impact on lasting behavior and patient outcomes.
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- 2021
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20. Medication Dosing Safety for Pediatric Patients: Recognizing Gaps, Safety Threats, and Best Practices in the Emergency Medical Services Setting. A Position Statement and Resource Document from NAEMSP.
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Cicero MX, Adelgais K, Hoyle JD, Lyng JW, Harris M, Moore B, and Gausche-Hill M
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- Child, Humans, Emergency Medical Services
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Background: Millions of patients receive medications in the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) setting annually, and dosing safety is critically important. The need for weight-based dosing in pediatric patients and variability in medication concentrations available in the EMS setting may require EMS providers to perform complex calculations to derive the appropriate dose to deliver. These factors can significantly increase the risk for harm when dose calculations are inaccurate or incorrect., Methods: We conducted a scoping review of the EMS, interfacility transport and emergency medicine literature regarding pediatric medication dosing safety. A priori, the authors identified four research topics: (1) what are the greatest safety threats that result in significant dosing errors that potentially result in harm to patients, (2) what practices or technologies are known to enhance dosing safety, (3) can data from other settings be extrapolated to the EMS environment to inform dosing safety, and (4) what impact could standardization of medication formularies have on enhancing dosing safety. To address these topics, 17 PICO (Patient, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome) questions were developed and a literature search was performed., Results: After applying exclusion criteria, 70 articles were reviewed. The methods for the investigation, findings from these articles and how they inform EMS medication dosing safety are summarized here. This review yielded 11 recommendations to improve safety of medication delivery in the EMS setting., Conclusion: These recommendations are summarized in the National Association of EMS Physicians® position statement: Medication Dosing Safety for Pediatric Patients in Emergency Medical Services .
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- 2021
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21. Changes in pediatric emergency department visits for mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic: A cross-sectional study.
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Leff RA, Setzer E, Cicero MX, and Auerbach M
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- Adolescent, Black or African American psychology, Black or African American statistics & numerical data, Child, Child, Preschool, Connecticut epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Hispanic or Latino psychology, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Insurance, Health, Male, Mental Disorders ethnology, SARS-CoV-2, Sex Factors, White People psychology, White People statistics & numerical data, COVID-19, Emergency Service, Hospital trends, Hospitals, Pediatric, Length of Stay trends, Mental Disorders epidemiology
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Background: Limited early results indicate that the COVID-19 outbreak has had a significant impact on the mental health of children and adolescents. Pediatric emergency departments (PED) play a pivotal role in the identification, treatment, and coordination of care for children with mental health disorders, however, there is a dearth of literature evaluating the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health care provision in the PED., Objectives: We sought to evaluate whether changes in frequency or patient demographics among children and adolescents presenting to the PED has occurred., Methods: This is a cross-sectional study conducted at the Yale New Haven Children's Hospital (YNHCH) PED. Data representing the early COVID-19 pandemic period was abstracted from the electronic medical record and compared using descriptive statistics to the same time period the year prior. Patient demographics including patient gender, ED disposition, mode of arrival, race-ethnicity, and insurance status were assessed., Results: During the pandemic period, 148 patients presented to the YNHCH PED with mental health-related diagnoses, compared to 378 in the pre-pandemic period, a reduction of 60.84%. Compared to white children, black children were 0.55 less likely to present with a mental health condition as compared to the pre-pandemic study period ( p = 0.002; 95% CI 0.36-0.85)., Conclusions: Children with mental and behavioral health disorders who seek care in PEDs may be at risk for delayed presentations of mental health disorders. African American children may be a particularly vulnerable population to screen for mental health disorders as reopening procedures are initiated and warrants further study.
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- 2021
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22. COVID-19: Transatlantic Declines in Pediatric Emergency Admissions.
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Isba R, Edge R, Auerbach M, Cicero MX, Jenner R, Setzer E, Broughton E, and Keegan T
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- Adolescent, COVID-19, Child, Child, Preschool, Coronavirus Infections therapy, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Pneumonia, Viral therapy, SARS-CoV-2, United Kingdom epidemiology, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, Pediatric standards, Pandemics, Patient Admission statistics & numerical data, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: This cross-sectional study looked at the impact of the SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19 pandemic on pediatric emergency department (PED) attendances and admissions (as a proxy for severity of illness) in the United States and United Kingdom., Methods: Data were extracted for children and adolescents, younger than 16 years, attending Royal Manchester Children's Hospital (RMCH, United Kingdom), and Yale New Haven Children's Hospital (YNHCH, United States). Attendances for weeks 1 to 20 of 2020 and 2019 were compared, and likelihood of admission was assessed via calculation of odds ratios, using week 13 (lockdown) as a cutoff., Results: Attendance numbers for each PED decreased in 2020 compared with 2019 (RMCH, 29.2%; YNHCH, 24.8%). Odds of admission were significantly higher after lockdown than in 2019-RMCH (odds ratio, 1.26; 95% confidence interval, 1.08-1.46) and YNHCH (odds ratio, 1.60; 95% confidence interval, 1.31-1.98)., Conclusions: Although the absolute numbers of children and adolescents attending the PED and being admitted decreased after lockdown, the acuity of illness of those attending appears to be higher.
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- 2020
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23. Cost-effectiveness of a video game versus live simulation for disaster training.
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Whitfill T, Auerbach M, Diaz MCG, Walsh B, Scherzer DJ, Gross IT, and Cicero MX
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Introduction: Disaster triage training for emergency medical service (EMS) providers is unstandardised. We hypothesised that disaster triage training with the paediatric disaster triage (PDT) video game '60 s to Survival' would be a cost-effective alternative to live simulation-based PDT training., Methods: We synthesised data for a cost-effectiveness analysis from two previous studies. The video game data were from the intervention arm of a randomised controlled trial that compared triage accuracy in a live simulation scenario of exposed vs unexposed groups to the video game. The live simulation and feedback data were from a prospective cohort study evaluating live simulation and feedback for improving disaster triage skills. Postintervention scores of triage accuracy were measured for participants via live simulations and compared between both groups. Cost-effectiveness between the live simulation and video game groups was assessed using (1) A net benefit regression model at various willingness-to-pay (WTP) values. (2) A cost-effectiveness acceptability curve (CEAC)., Results: The total cost for the live simulation and feedback training programme was $81 313.50 and the cost for the video game was $67 822. Incremental net benefit values at various WTP values revealed positive incremental net benefit values, indicating that the video game is more cost-effective compared with live simulation and feedback. Moreover, the CEAC revealed a high probability (>0.6) at various WTP values that the video game is more cost-effective., Conclusions: A video game-based simulation disaster triage training programme was more cost-effective than a live simulation and feedback-based programme. Video game-based training could be a simple, scalable and sustainable solution to training EMS providers., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2020
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24. Automated External Defibrillators in High Schools: Disparities Persist Despite Legislation.
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Thornton MD, Cicero MX, McCabe ME, and Chen L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Connecticut, Female, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Defibrillators statistics & numerical data, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest therapy, Schools legislation & jurisprudence, Schools statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: Automated external defibrillators (AEDs) have demonstrated increased survival in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, and their prevalence continues to rise. In 2009, Connecticut passed a legislation requiring all schools to have an AED, barring financial barriers. The objectives of this study were (1) to determine if this legislation was associated with an increase in Connecticut high school AEDs and (2) to detect disparities in the availability of AEDs based on school type, student demographics, and school size., Study Design: A single researcher conducted a scripted telephone survey of all 54 public and 13 private high schools in New Haven County, Connecticut., Results: A response rate of 100% was achieved. Forty-nine percent of high schools had an AED before the legislation, compared with 88% after (P < 0.001). Before legislation, private schools had a higher percentage of AEDs than public schools (69% vs 44%; P = 0.1). Postlegislation, the difference is less (92% vs 87%; P = 0.4). Small schools (<400 students) are significantly less likely to have an AED than larger schools (40% vs 100%; P < 0.001). Schools with a higher percentage of students with disabilities are also less likely to have an AED (P = 0.005), even when controlling for school size (P = 0.03)., Conclusions: State legislation requiring schools to have an AED, if financially feasible, was associated with a significant increase in AED presence among New Haven County high schools. Small high schools and those with a higher percentage of students with disabilities remain less likely to have an AED despite legislation.
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- 2020
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25. Tabletop Application of SALT Triage to 10, 100, and 1000 Pediatric Victims.
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McGlynn N, Claudius I, Kaji AH, Fisher EH, Shaban A, Cicero MX, Santillanes G, Gausche-Hill M, Chang TP, and Donofrio-Odmann JJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Algorithms, Child, Child, Preschool, Computer Simulation, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Los Angeles, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Disaster Planning, Mass Casualty Incidents statistics & numerical data, Triage
- Abstract
Introduction: The Sort, Access, Life-saving interventions, Treatment and/or Triage (SALT) mass-casualty incident (MCI) algorithm is unique in that it includes two subjective questions during the triage process: "Is the victim likely to survive given the resources?" and "Is the injury minor?", Hypothesis/problem: Given this subjectivity, it was hypothesized that as casualties increase, the inter-rater reliability (IRR) of the tool would decline, due to an increase in the number of patients triaged as Minor and Expectant., Methods: A pre-collected dataset of pediatric trauma patients age <14 years from a single Level 1 trauma center was used to generate "patients." Three trained raters triaged each patient using SALT as if they were in each of the following scenarios: 10, 100, and 1,000 victim MCIs. Cohen's kappa test was used to evaluate IRR between the raters in each of the scenarios., Results: A total of 247 patients were available for triage. The kappas were consistently "poor" to "fair:" 0.37 to 0.59 in the 10-victim scenario; 0.13 to 0.36 in the 100-victim scenario; and 0.05 to 0.36 in the 1,000-victim scenario. There was an increasing percentage of subjects triaged Minor as the number of estimated victims increased: 27.8% increase from 10- to 100-victim scenario and 7.0% increase from 100- to 1,000-victim scenario. Expectant triage categorization of patients remained stable as victim numbers increased., Conclusion: Overall, SALT demonstrated poor IRR in this study of increasing casualty counts while triaging pediatric patients. Increased casualty counts in the scenarios did lead to increased Minor but not Expectant categorizations.
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- 2020
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26. Comparative Effectiveness of Analgesics to Reduce Acute Pain in the Prehospital Setting.
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Sobieraj DM, Martinez BK, Miao B, Cicero MX, Kamin RA, Hernandez AV, Coleman CI, and Baker WL
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- Acute Pain diagnosis, Humans, Pain Measurement, Acute Pain drug therapy, Analgesics therapeutic use, Emergency Medical Services
- Abstract
Objectives : The objectives of this study were to assess comparative effectiveness and harms of opioid and nonopioid analgesics for the treatment of moderate to severe acute pain in the prehospital setting. Methods : We searched MEDLINE
® , Embase® , and Cochrane Central from the earliest date through May 9, 2019. Two investigators screened abstracts, reviewed full-text files, abstracted data, and assessed study level risk of bias. We performed meta-analyses when appropriate. Conclusions were made with consideration of established clinically important differences and we graded each conclusion's strength of evidence (SOE). Results : We included 52 randomized controlled trials and 13 observational studies. Due to the absence or insufficiency of prehospital evidence we based conclusions for initial analgesia on indirect evidence from the emergency department setting. As initial analgesics, there is no evidence of a clinically important difference in the change of pain scores with opioids vs. ketamine administered primarily intravenously (IV) (low SOE), IV acetaminophen (APAP) (low SOE), or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) administered primarily IV (moderate SOE). The combined use of an opioid and ketamine, administered primarily IV, may reduce pain more than an opioid alone at 15 and 30 minutes (low SOE). Opioids may cause fewer adverse events than ketamine (low SOE) when primarily administered intranasally. Opioids cause less dizziness than ketamine (low SOE) but may increase the risk of respiratory depression compared with ketamine (low SOE), primarily administered IV. Opioids cause more dizziness (moderate SOE) and may cause more adverse events than APAP (low SOE), both administered IV, but there is no evidence of a clinically important difference in hypotension (low SOE). Opioids may cause more adverse events and more drowsiness than NSAIDs (low SOE), both administered primarily IV. Conclusions : As initial analgesia, opioids are no different than ketamine, APAP, and NSAIDs in reducing acute pain in the prehospital setting. Opioids may cause fewer total side effects than ketamine, but more than APAP or NSAIDs. Combining an opioid and ketamine may reduce acute pain more than an opioid alone but comparative harms are uncertain. When initial morphine is inadequate, giving ketamine may provide greater and quicker acute pain relief than giving additional morphine, although comparative harms are uncertain. Due to indirectness, strength of evidence is generally low, and future research in the prehospital setting is needed.- Published
- 2020
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27. Comparative Effectiveness of Analgesics To Reduce Acute Pain in the Prehospital Setting
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Sobieraj DM, Baker WL, Martinez BK, Miao B, Hernandez AV, Coleman CI, Cicero MX, and Kamin RA
- Abstract
Objective: To assess comparative effectiveness and harms of opioid and nonopioid analgesics administered by emergency medical services for treatment of moderate to severe acute pain in the prehospital setting., Data Sources: MEDLINE
® , Embase® , and Cochrane Central from earliest date through May 9, 2019; hand searches of references of relevant studies and study registries., Review Methods: Two investigators screened abstracts, reviewed full-text files, abstracted data, and assessed study-level risk of bias. We performed meta-analyses when appropriate and graded the strength of evidence (SOE) upon which conclusions were made for a priori determined comparisons and outcomes. We defined the following as clinically important differences: 2 points on a 0 to 10 pain scale; time to analgesia of 5 minutes; 10-percent absolute risk difference for any adverse event; and 5-percent absolute risk difference for hypotension, respiratory depression, and mental status changes., Results: We included 52 randomized controlled trials and 13 observational studies. Due to the absence or insufficiency of prehospital evidence we based conclusions for initial analgesia on indirect evidence from the emergency department setting. As initial analgesics, we found no evidence of a clinically important difference in the change of pain scores with opioids versus ketamine administered primarily intravenously (IV) (low SOE), IV acetaminophen (APAP) (low SOE), or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) administered primarily IV (moderate SOE). The combined use of an opioid and ketamine, administered primarily IV, may reduce pain more than an opioid alone at 15 and 30 minutes (low SOE), but we found no evidence of a clinically important difference at 60 minutes (low SOE). We found no evidence of a clinically important difference in time to analgesia with opioids compared with APAP, both administered IV. Opioids may cause fewer adverse events than ketamine (low SOE), primarily administered intranasally. Opioids cause less dizziness than ketamine (low SOE) but may increase the risk of respiratory depression compared with ketamine (low SOE), primarily administered IV. Opioids cause more dizziness (moderate SOE) and may cause more adverse events than APAP (low SOE), both administered IV, but we found no evidence of a clinically important difference in hypotension (low SOE). Opioids may cause more adverse events and more drowsiness than NSAIDs (low SOE), administered primarily IV. Evidence on comparative effects of nitrous oxide and on harms of combined opioid and ketamine is insufficient. For patients whose pain is not adequately reduced by IV morphine initially, we found that giving IV ketamine may reduce pain more and may be quicker than giving additional IV morphine (low SOE, insufficient evidence to determine comparative harms)., Conclusion: As initial analgesia administered primarily IV, opioids are no different than ketamine, APAP, and NSAIDs in reducing acute pain in the prehospital setting. Opioids may cause fewer total side effects than ketamine, but more than APAP or NSAIDs. Differences in specific side effects vary between analgesics and can further inform treatment decisions. Combined administration of an opioid and ketamine may reduce acute pain more than an opioid alone, but comparative harms are uncertain. When initial morphine is inadequate in reducing pain, giving ketamine may provide greater and quicker acute pain relief than giving additional morphine, although comparative harms are uncertain. Due to indirectness, SOE is generally low, and future research in the prehospital setting is needed.- Published
- 2019
28. Emergency Medical Responders and Adolescents With Autism Spectrum Disorder.
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Cheung V, McCarthy ML, Cicero MX, Leventhal JM, and Weitzman C
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- Adolescent, Autism Spectrum Disorder therapy, Child, Computer Simulation, Female, Humans, Male, Professional-Patient Relations, Triage statistics & numerical data, Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnosis, Clinical Competence statistics & numerical data, Emergency Responders statistics & numerical data, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
- Abstract
Objectives: Because of the high prevalence of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and wandering behavior, emergency medical responders (EMRs) will likely encounter children and adolescents with ASD. The objectives were to describe interactions between EMRs and children and adolescents with ASD, to evaluate EMRs' ability to recognize ASD in a simulated trauma setting, and to determine if EMRs' demographic characteristics affected their interactions with ASD youth., Methods: A study of 75 videos of a simulated school bus crash was performed. The simulation included an adolescent with ASD portrayed by an actor. Videos were coded based on 5 domains: (1) reassurance attempts by the EMR, (2) quality of the EMR's interactions, (3) EMR's elicitation of information, (4) EMR's interactions with others, and (5) EMR's recognition of a disability. Two clinicians coded the videos independently, and consensus was reached for any areas of disagreement., Results: Of 75 interactions, 27% provided reassurance to the adolescent with ASD, 1% elicited information, 11% asked bystanders for information or assistance, and 35% suggested a disability with 13% considering ASD. No differences across domains were found based on the EMR's sex. Emergency medical responders with greater than or equal to 5 years of experience were significantly more likely to elicit information than those with less than 5 years of experience, and paramedics had significantly higher total performance scores than paramedic students or those with EMT-Basic., Conclusions: Few EMRs in this study optimally interacted with adolescents with ASD or recognized a disability. These findings suggest a strong need for targeted educational interventions.
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- 2019
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29. A tabletop school bus rollover: Connecticut-wide drills to build pediatric disaster preparedness and promote a novel hospital disaster readiness checklist.
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Cicero MX, Golloshi K, Gawel M, Parker J, Auerbach M, and Violano P
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- Checklist, Child, Connecticut, Humans, Pediatrics, Surge Capacity, Disaster Planning, Disasters
- Abstract
Objective: To assess emergency medical services (EMS) and hospital disaster plans and communication and promote an integrated pediatric disaster response in the state of Connecticut, using tabletop exercises to promote education, collaboration, and planning among healthcare entities., Design: Using hospital-specific and national guidelines, a disaster preparedness plan consisting of pediatric guidelines and a hospital checklist was created by The Connecticut Coalition for Pediatric Disaster Preparedness., Setting: Five school bus rollover tabletop exercises were conducted, one in each of Connecticut's five EMS regions. Action figures and playsets were used to depict patients, healthcare workers, vehicles, the school, and the hospital., Participants: EMS personnel, nurses, physicians and hospital administrators., Intervention: Participants had a facilitated debriefing of the EMS and prehospital response to disasters, communication among prehospital organizations, public health officials, hospitals, and schools, and surge capacity, capability, and alternate care sites. A checklist was completed for each exercise and was used with the facilitated debriefing to generate an afteraction report. Additionally, each participant completed a postexercise survey., Main Outcome Measures: Each after-action report and postexercise survey was compared to established guidelines to address gaps in hospital specific pediatric readiness., Results: Exercises occurred at five hospitals, with inpatient capacity ranging 77-1,592 beds, and between 0 and 221 pediatric beds. There were 27 participants in the tabletop exercises, and 20 complete survey responses for analysis (74 percent). After the exercises, pediatric disaster preparedness aligned with coalition guidelines. However, methods of expanding surge capacity and methods of generating surge capacity and capability varied (p < 0.031)., Conclusion: Statewide tabletop exercises promoted coalition building and revealed gaps between actual and ideal practice. Generation of surge capacity and capability should be addressed in future disaster education.
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- 2019
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30. GPS Devices in a Simulated Mass Casualty Event.
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Gross IT, Coughlin RF, Cone DC, Bogucki S, Auerbach M, and Cicero MX
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- Adolescent, Attitude of Health Personnel, Child, Disaster Planning, Female, Humans, Male, Patient Simulation, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Geographic Information Systems, Mass Casualty Incidents
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the staff perception of a global positioning system (GPS) as a patient tracking tool at an emergency department (ED) receiving patients from a simulated mass casualty event., Methods: During a regional airport disaster drill a plane crash with 46 pediatric patients was simulated. Personnel from airport fire, municipal fire, law enforcement, emergency medical services, and emergency medicine departments were present. Twenty of the 46 patient actors required transport for medical evaluation, and we affixed GPS devices to 12 of these actors. At the hospital, ED staff including attending physicians, fellows and nurses working in the ED during the time of the drill accessed a map through an application that provided real-time geolocation of these devices. The primary outcome was staff reception of the GPS device as assessed via Likert scale survey after the event. The secondary outcomes were free text feedback from staff and event debriefing observations., Results: Queried registered nurses, attending physicians, and pediatric emergency medicine fellows perceived the GPS device as an advantage for patient care during a disaster. The GPS device allowed multiple-screen real-time tracking and improved situational awareness in cases with and without EMS radio communication prior to arrival at the hospital., Conclusion: ED staff reported that the use of GPS trackers in a disaster improved real-time tracking and could potentially improve patient management during a mass casualty event.
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- 2019
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31. Correlation Between Paramedic Disaster Triage Accuracy in Screen-Based Simulations and Immersive Simulations.
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Cicero MX, Whitfill T, Walsh B, Diaz MCG, Arteaga GM, Scherzer DJ, Goldberg SA, Madhok M, Bowen A, Paesano G, Redlener M, Munjal K, and Auerbach M
- Subjects
- Adult, Cohort Studies, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Male, Allied Health Personnel education, Computer-Assisted Instruction, Emergency Medical Technicians education, Mass Casualty Incidents, Simulation Training methods, Triage
- Abstract
Background: Disaster triage is an infrequent, high-stakes skill set used by emergency medical services (EMS) personnel. Screen-based simulation (SBS) provides easy access to asynchronous disaster triage education. However, it is unclear if the performance during a SBS correlates with immersive simulation performance. Methods: This was a nested cohort study within a randomized controlled trial (RCT). The RCT compared triage accuracy of paramedics and emergency medical technicians (EMTs) who completed an immersive simulation of a school shooting, interacted with an SBS for 13 weeks, and then completed the immersive simulation again. The participants were divided into two groups: those exposed vs. those not exposed to 60 Seconds to Survival
© (60S) , a disaster triage SBS. The aim of the study was to measure the correlation between SBS triage accuracy and immersive simulation triage accuracy. Improvements in triage accuracy were compared among participants in the nested study before and after interacting with 60S , and with improvements in triage accuracy in a previous study in which immersive simulations were used as an educational intervention. Results: Thirty-nine participants completed the SBS; 26 (67%) completed at least three game plays and were included in the evaluation of outcomes of interest. The mean number of plays was 8.5 (SD =7.4). Subjects correctly triaged 12.4% more patients in the immersive simulation at study completion (73.1% before, 85.8% after, P = 0.004). There was no correlation between the amount of improvement in overall SBS triage accuracy, instances of overtriage (P = 0.101), instances of undertriage (P = 0.523), and improvement in the second immersive simulation. A comparison of the pooled data from a previous immersive simulation study with the nested cohort data showed similar improvement in triage accuracy (P = 0.079). Conclusions: SBS education was associated with a significant increase in triage accuracy in an immersive simulation, although triage accuracy demonstrated in the SBS did not correlate with the performance in the immersive simulation. This improvement in accuracy was similar to the improvement seen when immersive simulation was used as the educational intervention in a previous study.- Published
- 2019
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32. 60 Seconds to Survival: A Multisite Study of a Screen-based Simulation to Improve Prehospital Providers Disaster Triage Skills.
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Cicero MX, Whitfill T, Walsh B, Diaz MC, Arteaga G, Scherzer DJ, Goldberg S, Madhok M, Bowen A, Paesano G, Redlener M, Munjal K, Kessler D, and Auerbach M
- Abstract
Objectives: Paramedics and emergency medical technicians (EMTs) perform triage at disaster sites. There is a need for disaster triage training. Live simulation training is costly and difficult to deliver. Screen-based simulations may overcome these training barriers. We hypothesized that a screen-based simulation, 60 Seconds to Survival (60S), would be associated with in-game improvements in triage accuracy., Methods: This was a prospective cohort study of a screen-based simulation intervention, 60S. Participants included emergency medical services (EMS) personnel from 21 EMS agencies across 12 states. Participants performed assessments (e.g., check for pulse) and actions (e.g., reposition the airway) for 12 patients in each scenario and assigned color-coded triage levels (red, yellow, green, or black) to each patient. Participants received on-screen feedback about triage performance immediately after each scenario. A scoring system was designed to encourage accurate and timely triage decisions. Participants who played 60S included practicing EMTs, paramedics, and nurses as well as students studying to assume these roles. Participants played the game at least three times over 13 weeks., Results: In total, 2,234 participants began game play and 739 completed the study and were included in the analysis. Overall, the median number of plays of the game was just above the threshold inclusion criteria (three or more plays) with a median of four plays during the study period (interquartile range [IQR] = 3-7). There was a significant difference in triage accuracy from the first play of the game to the last play of the game. Median baseline triage accuracy in the game was 89.7% (IQR = 82.1%-94.9%), which then increased to a median of 100% at the last game play (IQR = 87.5%-100.0%; p < 0.001). There was some variability in median triage accuracy on fourth through 11th game plays, ranging from 95% to 100%, and on the 12th to 16th plays, the median accuracy was sustained at 100%. There was a significant decrease in the rate of undertriage: from 10.3% (IQR = 5.1%-18.0%) to 0 (IQR = 0%-12.5%; p < 0.001)., Conclusion: 60 Seconds to Survival is associated with improved in-game triage accuracy. Further study of the correlation between in-game triage accuracy and improvements in live simulation or real-world triage decisions is warranted.
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- 2018
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33. Pediatric Disaster Triage System Utilization Across the United States.
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Nadeau NL and Cicero MX
- Subjects
- Disaster Planning, Emergency Medical Services standards, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Triage methods, United States, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data, Mass Casualty Incidents statistics & numerical data, Pediatrics standards, Triage standards
- Abstract
Objectives: The study goal was to determine which pediatric disaster triage (PDT) systems are used in US states/territories and whether there is standardization to their use. Secondary goals were to understand user satisfaction with each system, user preferences, and the nature and magnitude of incidents for which the systems are activated., Methods: A survey was developed regarding PDT systems used in each state/territory, satisfaction with those used, preference for specific systems, and type and magnitude of incidents prompting system activation. The survey was distributed to emergency medical services for children leads in each state/territory., Results: Eighty-six percent of states/territories responded. Eighty-eight percent of respondents used some formal PDT system, 50% of whom reported utilization of multiple systems. JumpSTART was most commonly used, most often in conjunction with other systems. Of formal systems, JumpSTART has been in use the longest. JumpSTART was also preferred by 71% of those stating a preference; it tied with Smart for median satisfaction level. Although types of incidents prompting system activation was similar across responding states/territories, number of patients prompting activation varied from 1 to 3 to greater than 20, median range of 4 to 7., Conclusions: Most states/territories use some formal PDT system; few have 1 standardized approach. JumpSTART is predominantly used and is preferred by most respondents. With all systems, there is marked variation in number of patients prompting activation although the reported nature of incidents prompting activation is similar.
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- 2017
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34. 60 seconds to survival: A pilot study of a disaster triage video game for prehospital providers.
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Cicero MX, Whitfill T, Munjal K, Madhok M, Diaz MCG, Scherzer DJ, Walsh BM, Bowen A, Redlener M, Goldberg SA, Symons N, Burkett J, Santos JC, Kessler D, Barnicle RN, Paesano G, and Auerbach MA
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Mass Casualty Incidents prevention & control, Patient Simulation, Pilot Projects, Disaster Medicine education, Emergency Medical Services methods, Emergency Responders education, Triage methods, Video Games
- Abstract
Introduction: Disaster triage training for emergency medical service (EMS) providers is not standardized. Simulation training is costly and time-consuming. In contrast, educational video games enable low-cost and more time-efficient standardized training. We hypothesized that players of the video game "60 Seconds to Survival" (60S) would have greater improvements in disaster triage accuracy compared to control subjects who did not play 60S., Methods: Participants recorded their demographics and highest EMS training level and were randomized to play 60S (intervention) or serve as controls. At baseline, all participants completed a live school-shooting simulation in which manikins and standardized patients depicted 10 adult and pediatric victims. The intervention group then played 60S at least three times over the course of 13 weeks (time 2). Players triaged 12 patients in three scenarios (school shooting, house fire, tornado), and received in-game performance feedback. At time 2, the same live simulation was conducted for all participants. Controls had no disaster training during the study. The main outcome was improvement in triage accuracy in live simulations from baseline to time 2. Physicians and EMS providers predetermined expected triage level (RED/YELLOW/GREEN/BLACK) via modified Delphi method., Results: There were 26 participants in the intervention group and 21 in the control group. There was no difference in gender, level of training, or years of EMS experience (median 5.5 years intervention, 3.5 years control, p = 0.49) between the groups. At baseline, both groups demonstrated median triage accuracy of 80 percent (IQR 70-90 percent, p = 0.457). At time 2, the intervention group had a significant improvement from baseline (median accuracy = 90 percent [IQR: 80-90 percent], p = 0.005), while the control group did not (median accuracy = 80 percent [IQR:80-95], p = 0.174). However, the mean improvement from baseline was not significant between the two groups (difference = 6.5, p = 0.335)., Conclusion: The intervention demonstrated a significant improvement in accuracy from baseline to time 2 while the control did not. However, there was no significant difference in the improvement between the intervention and control groups. These results may be due to small sample size. Future directions include assessment of the game's effect on triage accuracy with a larger, multisite site cohort and iterative development to improve 60S.
- Published
- 2017
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35. Pediatric Disaster Triage: Multiple Simulation Curriculum Improves Prehospital Care Providers' Assessment Skills.
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Cicero MX, Whitfill T, Overly F, Baird J, Walsh B, Yarzebski J, Riera A, Adelgais K, Meckler GD, Baum C, Cone DC, and Auerbach M
- Subjects
- Child, Clinical Competence, Curriculum, Delphi Technique, Disaster Medicine education, Humans, Mass Casualty Incidents, Patient Simulation, Prospective Studies, Disaster Medicine standards, Educational Measurement standards, Emergency Medical Services standards, Emergency Medical Technicians education, Emergency Medical Technicians standards, Triage standards
- Abstract
Objective: Paramedics and emergency medical technicians (EMTs) triage pediatric disaster victims infrequently. The objective of this study was to measure the effect of a multiple-patient, multiple-simulation curriculum on accuracy of pediatric disaster triage (PDT)., Methods: Paramedics, paramedic students, and EMTs from three sites were enrolled. Triage accuracy was measured three times (Time 0, Time 1 [two weeks later], and Time 2 [6 months later]) during a disaster simulation, in which high and low fidelity manikins and actors portrayed 10 victims. Accuracy was determined by participant triage decision concordance with predetermined expected triage level (RED [Immediate], YELLOW [Delayed], GREEN [Ambulatory], BLACK [Deceased]) for each victim. Between Time 0 and Time 1, participants completed an interactive online module, and after each simulation there was an individual debriefing. Associations between participant level of training, years of experience, and enrollment site were determined, as were instances of the most dangerous mistriage, when RED and YELLOW victims were triaged BLACK., Results: The study enrolled 331 participants, and the analysis included 261 (78.9%) participants who completed the study, 123 from the Connecticut site, 83 from Rhode Island, and 55 from Massachusetts. Triage accuracy improved significantly from Time 0 to Time 1, after the educational interventions (first simulation with debriefing, and an interactive online module), with a median 10% overall improvement (p < 0.001). Subgroup analyses showed between Time 0 and Time 1, paramedics and paramedic students improved more than EMTs (p = 0.002). Analysis of triage accuracy showed greatest improvement in overall accuracy for YELLOW triage patients (Time 0 50% accurate, Time1 100%), followed by RED patients (Time 0 80%, Time 1 100%). There was no significant difference in accuracy between Time 1 and Time 2 (p = 0.073)., Conclusion: This study shows that the multiple-victim, multiple-simulation curriculum yields a durable 10% improvement in simulated triage accuracy. Future iterations of the curriculum can target greater improvements in EMT triage accuracy.
- Published
- 2017
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36. On Shaky Ground: Learner Response and Confidence After Tabletop Earthquake Simulation.
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Whitney RE, Burke RV, Lehman-Huskamp K, Arora G, Park DB, and Cicero MX
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- Clinical Competence, Educational Measurement, Female, Humans, Internship and Residency, Male, Pediatrics education, Surveys and Questionnaires, Disaster Planning organization & administration, Earthquakes, Emergency Medicine education, Simulation Training methods
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate residents' confidence and attitudes related to management of earthquake victims during a tabletop simulation and 6 months after the intervention., Methods: Pediatric residents from 4 training programs were recruited via e-mail. The tabletop simulation involved 3 pediatric patients (crush injury, head injury, and a nonverbal patient with minor injuries). A facilitated debriefing took place after the simulation. The same simulation was repeated 6 months later. A survey was administered before the simulation, immediately after, and after the 6-month repeat simulation to determine participants' self-rated confidence and willingness to respond in the event of a disaster. A 5-point Likert scale that ranged through novice, advanced beginner, competent, proficient, and expert was used., Results: Ninety-nine participants completed the survey before the initial simulation session. Fifty-one residents completed the immediate postsurvey, and 75 completed the 6-month postsurvey. There was a statistically significant improvement in self-rated confidence identifying and managing victims of earthquake disasters after participating in the simulation, with 3% rating themselves as competent on the presurvey and 33% rating themselves as competent on the postsurvey (P < 0.05). There was a nonstatistically significant improvement in confidence treating suspected traumatic head injury as well as willingness to deploy to both domestic and international disasters., Conclusions: Tabletop simulation can improve resident comfort level with rare events, such as caring for children in the aftermath of an earthquake. Tabletop can also be easily integrated into resident curriculum and may be an effective way to provide disaster medical response training for trainees.
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- 2016
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37. Development of a Pediatric Mass Casualty Triage Algorithm Validation Tool.
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Donofrio JJ, Kaji AH, Claudius IA, Chang TP, Santillanes G, Cicero MX, Srinivasan S, Perez-Rogers A, and Gausche-Hill M
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Algorithms, Mass Casualty Incidents, Triage standards
- Abstract
Background: Rapid, accurate evaluation and sorting of victims in a mass casualty incident (MCI) is crucial, as over-triage of victims may overwhelm a trauma system and under-triage may lead to an increase in morbidity and mortality. At this time, there is no validation tool specifically developed for the pediatric population to test an MCI algorithm's inherent capabilities to correctly triage children., Objective: To develop a set of criteria for outcomes and interventions to be used as a validation tool for testing an MCI algorithm's ability to correctly triage patients from a cohort of pediatric trauma patients., Methods: Expert opinion and literature review was used to formulate an initial Criteria Outcomes Tool (COT) that retrospectively categorizes pediatric (≤14 years of age) MCI victims based on resource utilization and clinical outcomes using the classic Red to Black MCI triage designations: Red - cardiopulmonary or mental status compromise needing intervention, Yellow - stable cardiopulmonary status but may require life or limb therapy, Green - minimally injured, and Black - deceased or likely to die given the circumstances. Using an anatomic approach, a list of criteria were defined and a modified-Delphi approach was used to create a summative COT that was reviewed by the American Academy of Pediatrics Disaster Preparedness Advisory Council. The resulting COT was independently applied to a weighted retrospective cohort of 25 pediatric victims from a single Level I trauma center by two reviewers to determine reproducibility., Results: We created a Criteria Outcomes Tool (COT) with 47 outcomes and interventions to validate an MCI algorithm's triage designation. When the COT was applied to a cohort of 25 weighted pediatric charts, we identified the following resource utilization and outcome based triage designations: six Red, six Yellow, six Green, and seven Black triage outcomes. The 100% agreement was obtained between the two reviewers in each of the four categories., Conclusions: We designed an outcomes and resource utilization tool, the COT, to evaluate the ability of an MCI algorithm to correctly triage pediatric patients. Our tool has good reproducibility on initial study., Key Words: pediatric; disaster; validation tools; triage algorithms; emergency.
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- 2016
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38. Comparing the Accuracy of Three Pediatric Disaster Triage Strategies: A Simulation-Based Investigation.
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Cicero MX, Overly F, Brown L, Yarzebski J, Walsh B, Shabanova V, Auerbach M, Riera A, Adelgais K, Meckler G, Cone DC, and Baum CR
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Emergency Medical Services methods, Emergency Medical Services standards, Female, Humans, Male, Pediatrics methods, Prospective Studies, Mass Casualty Incidents statistics & numerical data, Patient Simulation, Pediatrics standards, Triage methods, Triage standards
- Abstract
Background: It is unclear which pediatric disaster triage (PDT) strategy yields the best accuracy or best patient outcomes., Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis on a sample of emergency medical services providers from a prospective cohort study comparing the accuracy and triage outcomes for 2 PDT strategies (Smart and JumpSTART) and clinical decision-making (CDM) with no algorithm. Participants were divided into cohorts by triage strategy. We presented 10-victim, multi-modal disaster simulations. A Delphi method determined patients' expected triage levels. We compared triage accuracy overall and for each triage level (RED/Immediate, YELLOW/Delayed, GREEN/Ambulatory, BLACK/Deceased)., Results: There were 273 participants (71 JumpSTART, 122 Smart, and 81 CDM). There was no significant difference between Smart triage and CDM. When JumpSTART triage was used, there was greater accuracy than with either Smart (P<0.001; OR [odds ratio]: 2.03; interquartile range [IQR]: 1.30, 3.17) or CDM (P=0.02; OR: 1.76; IQR: 1.10, 2.82). JumpSTART outperformed Smart for RED patients (P=0.05; OR: 1.48; IQR: 1.01,2.17), and outperformed both Smart (P<0.001; OR: 3.22; IQR: 1.78,5.88) and CDM (P<0.001; OR: 2.86; IQR: 1.53,5.26) for YELLOW patients. Furthermore, JumpSTART outperformed CDM for BLACK patients (P=0.01; OR: 5.55; IQR: 1.47, 20.0)., Conclusion: Our simulation-based comparison suggested that JumpSTART triage outperforms both Smart and CDM. JumpSTART outperformed Smart for RED patients and CDM for BLACK patients. For YELLOW patients, JumpSTART yielded more accurate triage results than did Smart triage or CDM.
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- 2016
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39. Accuracy, Efficiency, and Inappropriate Actions Using JumpSTART Triage in MCI Simulations.
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Claudius I, Kaji AH, Santillanes G, Cicero MX, Donofrio JJ, Gausche-Hill M, Srinivasan S, and Chang TP
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- Algorithms, Child, Child, Preschool, Computer Simulation, Humans, Pediatrics education, Pediatrics methods, Students, Medical, Clinical Competence, Mass Casualty Incidents, Triage methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Using the pediatric version of the Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment (JumpSTART) algorithm for the triage of pediatric patients in a mass-casualty incident (MCI) requires assessing the results of each step and determining whether to move to the next appropriate action. Inappropriate application can lead to performance of unnecessary actions or failure to perform necessary actions. Hypothesis/Problem To report overall accuracy and time required for triage, and to assess if the performance of unnecessary steps, or failure to perform required steps, in the triage algorithm was associated with inaccuracy of triage designation or increased time to reach a triage decision., Methods: Medical students participated in an MCI drill in which they triaged both live actors portraying patients and computer-based simulated patients to the four triage levels: minor, delayed, immediate, and expectant. Their performance was timed and compared to intended triage designations and a priori determined critical actions., Results: Thirty-three students completed 363 scenarios. The overall accuracy was 85.7% and overall mean time to assign a triage designation was 70.4 seconds, with decreasing times as triage acuity level decreased. In over one-half of cases, the student omitted at least one action and/or performed at least one action that was not required. Each unnecessary action increased time to triage by a mean of 8.4 seconds and each omitted action increased time to triage by a mean of 5.5 seconds. Discussion Increasing triage level, performance of inappropriate actions, and omission of recommended actions were all associated with increasing time to perform triage.
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- 2015
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40. Barriers to pediatric disaster triage: a qualitative investigation.
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Koziel JR, Meckler G, Brown L, Acker D, Torino M, Walsh B, and Cicero MX
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- Allied Health Personnel, Curriculum, Disasters, Female, Humans, Male, Mass Casualty Incidents, Disaster Medicine education, Emergency Medical Services methods, Emergency Medical Technicians education, Pediatrics education, Triage
- Abstract
Background: In disasters, paramedics often triage victims, including children. Little is known about obstacles paramedics face when performing pediatric disaster triage., Objective: To determine obstacles to pediatric disaster triage performance for paramedics enrolled in a simulation-based disaster curriculum., Design: We conducted a qualitative evaluation of paramedics' self-reported obstacles to pediatric disaster triage performance. The paramedics were enrolled in a pediatric disaster triage curriculum at one of three study sites. An individually administered, semi-structured debriefing was created iteratively, and used after a 10-victim, multiple-family house fire simulation. The debriefings were audio-recorded, and transcribed. Two investigators independently analyzed the transcripts. Using grounded theory strategy, the data were analyzed via 1) immersion and coding of data, 2) clustering of codes to generate themes, and 3) theme-based generation of hypotheses. While analyzing the data, we employed peer debriefing to determine emerging codes, groups, and thematic saturation. Systematically applied data trustworthiness strategies included triangulation and member checking., Results: A total of 34 participants were debriefed, with prehospital care experience ranging from 1 to 25 years of experience. We identified several barriers to pediatric disaster triage: 1) lack of familiarity with children and their physiology, 2) challenges with triaging children with special health-care needs, 3) emotional reactions to triage situations, including a mother holding an injured/dead child, and 4) training limitations, including poor simulation fidelity., Conclusion: Paramedics report particular difficulty triaging multiple child disaster victims due to emotional obstacles, unfamiliarity with pediatric physiology, and struggles with triage rationale and efficiency.
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- 2015
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41. A better START for low-acuity victims: data-driven refinement of mass casualty triage.
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Cross KP, Petry MJ, and Cicero MX
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- Adult, Aged, Algorithms, Area Under Curve, Female, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Registries, Mass Casualty Incidents, Triage methods
- Abstract
Objective: Methods currently used to triage patients from mass casualty events have a sparse evidence basis. The objective of this project was to assess gaps of the widely used Simple Triage and Rapid Transport (START) algorithm using a large database when it is used to triage low-acuity patients. Subsequently, we developed and tested evidenced-based improvements to START., Methods: Using the National Trauma Database (NTDB), a large set of trauma victims were assigned START triage levels, which were then compared to recorded patient mortality outcomes using area under the receiver-operator curve (AUC). Subjects assigned to the "Minor/Green" level who nevertheless died prior to hospital discharge were considered mistriaged. Recursive partitioning identified factors associated with of these mistriaged patients. These factors were then used to develop candidate START models of improved triage, whose overall performance was then re-evaluated using data from the NTDB. This process of evaluating performance, identifying errors, and further adjusting candidate models was repeated iteratively., Results: The study included 322,162 subjects assigned to "Minor/Green" of which 2,046 died before hospital discharge. Age was the primary predictor of under-triage by START. Candidate models which re-assigned patients from the "Minor/Green" triage level to the "Delayed/Yellow" triage level based on age (either for patients >60 or >75), reduced mortality in the "Minor/Green" group from 0.6% to 0.1% and 0.3%, respectively. These candidate START models also showed net improvement in the AUC for predicting mortality overall and in select subgroups., Conclusion: In this research model using trauma registry data, most START under-triage errors occurred in elderly patients. Overall START accuracy was improved by placing elderly but otherwise minimally injured-mass casualty victims into a higher risk triage level. Alternatively, such patients would be candidates for closer monitoring at the scene or expedited transport ahead of other, younger "Minor/Green" victims.
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- 2015
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42. Do you see what I see? Insights from using google glass for disaster telemedicine triage.
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Cicero MX, Walsh B, Solad Y, Whitfill T, Paesano G, Kim K, Baum CR, and Cone DC
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- Connecticut, Disaster Planning, Efficiency, Organizational, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Task Performance and Analysis, Video Recording, Accidents, Aviation, Emergency Medical Service Communication Systems, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Emergency Medical Technicians, Eyeglasses, Internet, Triage organization & administration
- Abstract
Introduction: Disasters are high-stakes, low-frequency events. Telemedicine may offer a useful adjunct for paramedics performing disaster triage. The objective of this study was to determine the feasibility of telemedicine in disaster triage, and to determine whether telemedicine has an effect on the accuracy of triage or the time needed to perform triage., Methods: This is a feasibility study in which an intervention team of two paramedics used the mobile device Google Glass (Google Inc; Mountain View, California USA) to communicate with an off-site physician disaster expert. The paramedic team triaged simulated disaster victims at the triennial drill of a commercial airport. The simulated victims had preassigned expected triage levels. The physician had an audio-video interface with the paramedic team and was able to observe the victims remotely. A control team of two paramedics performed disaster triage in the usual fashion. Both teams used the SMART Triage System (TSG Associates LLP; Halifax, England), which assigns patients into Red, Yellow, Green, and Black triage categories. The paramedics were video recorded, and their time required to triage was logged. It was determined whether the intervention team and the control team varied regarding accuracy of triage. Finally, the amount of time the intervention team needed to triage patients when telemedicine was used was compared to when that team did not use telemedicine., Results: The two teams triaged the same 20 patients. There was no significant difference between the two groups in overall triage accuracy (85.7% for the intervention group vs 75.9% for the control group; P = .39). Two patients were triaged with telemedicine. For the intervention group, there was a significant difference in time to triage patients with telemedicine versus those without telemedicine (35.5 seconds; 95% CI, 72.5-143.5 vs 18.5 seconds; 95% CI, 13.4-23.6; P = .041)., Conclusion: There was no increase in triage accuracy when paramedics evaluating disaster victims used telemedicine, and telemedicine required more time than conventional triage. There are a number of obstacles to available technology that, if overcome, might improve the utility of telemedicine in disaster response.
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- 2015
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43. Checklist use in evaluating pediatric disaster training.
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Burke RV, Lehman-Huskamp K, Whitney RE, Arora G, Park DB, Mar P, and Cicero MX
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- Disasters, Humans, Checklist, Disaster Medicine education, Disaster Planning, Internship and Residency, Pediatrics education, Simulation Training
- Abstract
Objective: Disaster preparedness training has a small but growing part in medical education. Various strategies have been used to simulate disaster scenarios to safely provide such training. However, a modality to compare their effectiveness is lacking. The authors propose the use of checklists, which have been a standard in aviation safety for decades., Design: Residents at four different academic pediatric residency programs volunteered to participate in tabletop simulation of a timed, pediatric disaster scenario. Resident teams were required to properly triage and manage simulated patients. Care intervention requests corresponding to each of the patients were recorded on a premade checklist., Results: Thirty-six teams provided a total of 1,476 possible care intervention requests for three pediatric patients: one with crush injury, one with increased intracranial pressure, and a nonverbal child. Some interventions were more likely to be omitted than others, and some teams performed extra interventions. Twenty-five entries from the checklist intervention responses were missing, affecting three of the teams. On average, teams requested 65 percent, were prompted to request 11 percent, and missed 22 percent of all checklist interventions with only 2 percent of all items not being recorded. Chi-square tests were performed for each patient scenario using R software. Categories compared included total counts of "requested," "prompted," and "missed" responses. Chi-square values were all statistically significant (p value < 0.05)., Conclusions: In the checklist use during a tabletop disaster simulation, the authors have demonstrated that the checklist allows trainees to receive near immediate feedback. This training exercise provided them an opportunity to explore their own preparedness for a disaster scenario in a low-stress environment and allows for evaluation of such preparedness in a safe environment.
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- 2015
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44. Creation and Delphi-method refinement of pediatric disaster triage simulations.
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Cicero MX, Brown L, Overly F, Yarzebski J, Meckler G, Fuchs S, Tomassoni A, Aghababian R, Chung S, Garrett A, Fagbuyi D, Adelgais K, Goldman R, Parker J, Auerbach M, Riera A, Cone D, and Baum CR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Computer Simulation, Delphi Technique, Emergency Medical Services methods, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Manikins, Patient Simulation, Triage methods, Disaster Medicine education, Emergency Medical Services standards, Emergency Medical Technicians education, Mass Casualty Incidents, Pediatrics education, Triage standards
- Abstract
Objective: There is a need for rigorously designed pediatric disaster triage (PDT) training simulations for paramedics. First, we sought to design three multiple patient incidents for EMS provider training simulations. Our second objective was to determine the appropriate interventions and triage level for each victim in each of the simulations and develop evaluation instruments for each simulation. The final objective was to ensure that each simulation and evaluation tool was free of bias toward any specific PDT strategy., Methods: We created mixed-methods disaster simulation scenarios with pediatric victims: a school shooting, a school bus crash, and a multiple-victim house fire. Standardized patients, high-fidelity manikins, and low-fidelity manikins were used to portray the victims. Each simulation had similar acuity of injuries and 10 victims. Examples include children with special health-care needs, gunshot wounds, and smoke inhalation. Checklist-based evaluation tools and behaviorally anchored global assessments of function were created for each simulation. Eight physicians and paramedics from areas with differing PDT strategies were recruited as Subject Matter Experts (SMEs) for a modified Delphi iterative critique of the simulations and evaluation tools. The modified Delphi was managed with an online survey tool. The SMEs provided an expected triage category for each patient. The target for modified Delphi consensus was ≥85%. Using Likert scales and free text, the SMEs assessed the validity of the simulations, including instances of bias toward a specific PDT strategy, clarity of learning objectives, and the correlation of the evaluation tools to the learning objectives and scenarios., Results: After two rounds of the modified Delphi, consensus for expected triage level was >85% for 28 of 30 victims, with the remaining two achieving >85% consensus after three Delphi iterations. To achieve consensus, we amended 11 instances of bias toward a specific PDT strategy and corrected 10 instances of noncorrelation between evaluations and simulation., Conclusions: The modified Delphi process, used to derive novel PDT simulation and evaluation tools, yielded a high degree of consensus among the SMEs, and eliminated biases toward specific PDT strategies in the evaluations. The simulations and evaluation tools may now be tested for reliability and validity as part of a prehospital PDT curriculum.
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- 2014
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45. In reply.
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Cross KP and Cicero MX
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- Female, Humans, Male, Disaster Medicine methods, Triage methods
- Published
- 2013
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46. Going viral: adapting to pediatric surge during the H1N1 pandemic.
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Chung S, Fagbuyi D, Lozon MM, Johnson T, Nager AL, Cicero MX, Dahl-Grove D, Costello BE, and Krug SE
- Subjects
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S., Child, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Guideline Adherence, Health Care Surveys, Health Facility Moving organization & administration, Hospitals, Pediatric organization & administration, Hospitals, Pediatric statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional prevention & control, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric organization & administration, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric statistics & numerical data, Masks statistics & numerical data, Masks supply & distribution, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Tertiary Care Centers organization & administration, Tertiary Care Centers statistics & numerical data, Trauma Centers organization & administration, Trauma Centers statistics & numerical data, United States, Disaster Planning, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype, Influenza, Human diagnosis, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Influenza, Human therapy, Pandemics
- Abstract
Objectives: The objective of this study was to assess hospital and emergency department (ED) pediatric surge strategies utilized during the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic as well as compliance with national guidelines., Methods: Electronic survey was sent to a convenience sample of emergency physicians and nurses from US EDs with a pediatric volume of more than 10,000 annually. Survey questions assessed the participant's hospital baseline pandemic and surge preparedness, as well as strategies for ED surge and compliance with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines for health care personal protection, patient testing, and treatment., Results: The response rate was 54% (53/99). Preexisting pandemic influenza plans were absent in 44% of hospitals; however, 91% developed an influenza plan as a result of the pandemic. Twenty-four percent reported having a preexisting ED pandemic staffing model, and 36% had a preexisting alternate care site plan. Creation and/or modifications of existing plans for ED pandemic staffing (82%) and alternate care site plan (68%) were reported. Seventy-nine percent of institutions initially followed CDC guidelines for personal protection (use of N95 masks), of which 82% later revised their practices. Complete compliance with CDC guidelines was 60% for patient testing and 68% for patient treatment., Conclusions: Before the H1N1 pandemic, greater than 40% of the hospitals in our study did not have an influenza pandemic preparedness plan. Many had to modify their existing plans during the surge. Not all institutions fully complied with CDC guidelines. Data from this multicenter survey should assist clinical leaders to create more robust surge plans for children.
- Published
- 2013
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47. Head-to-head comparison of disaster triage methods in pediatric, adult, and geriatric patients.
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Cross KP and Cicero MX
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Child, Child, Preschool, Disasters statistics & numerical data, Female, Glasgow Coma Scale, Humans, Infant, Male, Mass Casualty Incidents mortality, Mass Casualty Incidents statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, ROC Curve, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Wounds and Injuries mortality, Young Adult, Disaster Medicine methods, Triage methods
- Abstract
Study Objective: A variety of methods have been proposed and used in disaster triage situations, but there is little more than expert opinion to support most of them. Anecdotal disaster experiences often report mediocre real-world triage accuracy. The study objective was to determine the accuracy of several disaster triage methods when predicting clinically important outcomes in a large cohort of trauma victims., Methods: Pediatric, adult, and geriatric trauma victims from the National Trauma Data Bank were assigned triage levels, using each of 6 disaster triage methods: simple triage and rapid treatment (START), Fire Department of New York (FDNY), CareFlight, Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), Sacco Score, and Unadjusted Sacco Score. Methods for approximating triage systems were vetted by subject matter experts. Triage assignments were compared against patient mortality at hospital discharge with area under the receiver operator curve. Secondary outcomes included death in the emergency department, use of a ventilator, and lengths of stay. Subgroup analysis assessed triage accuracy in patients by age, trauma type, and sex., Results: In this study, 530,695 records were included. The Sacco Score predicted mortality most accurately, with area under the receiver operator curve of 0.883 (95% confidence interval 0.880 to 0.885), and performed well in most subgroups. FDNY was more accurate than START for adults but less accurate for children. CareFlight was best for burn victims, with area under the receiver operator curve of 0.87 (95% confidence interval 0.85 to 0.89) but mistriaged more salvageable trauma patients to "dead/black" (41% survived) than did other disaster triage methods (≈10% survived)., Conclusion: Among 6 disaster triage methods compared against actual outcomes in trauma registry patients, the Sacco Score predicted mortality most accurately. This analysis highlighted comparative strengths and weakness of START, FDNY, CareFlight, and Sacco, suggesting areas in which each might be improved. The GCS predicted outcomes similarly to dedicated disaster triage strategies., (Copyright © 2013 American College of Emergency Physicians. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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48. Design, validity, and reliability of a pediatric resident JumpSTART disaster triage scoring instrument.
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Cicero MX, Riera A, Northrup V, Auerbach M, Pearson K, and Baum CR
- Subjects
- Education, Medical, Graduate, Humans, Internship and Residency, Reproducibility of Results, Clinical Competence, Disaster Medicine education, Pediatrics education, Triage methods
- Abstract
Objective: To design an instrument for scoring residents learning pediatric disaster triage (PDT), and to test the validity and reliability of the instrument., Methods: We designed a checklist-based scoring instrument including PDT knowledge and skills and performance, as well as a global assessment. Learners' performance in a 10-patient school bus crash simulation was video recorded and scored with the instrument. Learners triaged the patients with a color-coded algorithm (JumpSTART, Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment). Three evaluators observed the recordings and scored triage performance for each learner. Internal and construct validity of the instrument were established via comparison of resident performance by postgraduate year (PGY) and correlating instrument items with overall score. Validity was assessed with analysis of variance and the D statistic. We calculated evaluators' intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for each patient, skill, triage decision, and global assessment., Results: There were 37 learners and 111 observations. There was no difference in total scores by PGY (P = .77), establishing internal validity. Regarding construct validity, most instrument items had a D statistic of >0.5. The overall ICC among scores was 0.83 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.74-0.89). Individual patient score reliability was high and was greatest among patients with head injury (ICC 0.86; 95% CI 0.79-0.91). Reliability was low for an ambulatory patient (ICC 0.29; 95% CI 0.07-0.48). Triage skills evaluation showed excellent reliability, including airway management (ICC 0.91; 95% CI 0.86-0.94) and triage speed (ICC 0.81; 95% CI 0.72-0.88). The global assessment had moderate reliability for skills (ICC 0.63; 95% CI 0.47-0.75) and knowledge (ICC 0.64; 95% CI 0.49-0.76)., Conclusions: We report the validity and reliability testing of a PDT-scoring instrument. Validity was confirmed with no performance differential by PGY. Reliability of the scoring instrument for most patient-level triage, knowledge, and specific skills was high., (Copyright © 2013 Academic Pediatric Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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49. Independent application of the Sacco Disaster Triage Method to pediatric trauma patients.
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Cross KP and Cicero MX
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Area Under Curve, Child, Child, Preschool, Evidence-Based Medicine, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, ROC Curve, Registries, Trauma Severity Indices, United States epidemiology, Wounds and Injuries epidemiology, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Pediatrics methods, Triage methods, Wounds and Injuries classification
- Abstract
Introduction: Though many mass-casualty triage methods have been proposed, few have been validated in an evidence-based manner. The Sacco Triage Method (STM) has been shown to accurately stratify adult victims of blunt and penetrating trauma into groups of increasing mortality risk. However, it has not been validated for pediatric trauma victims., Purpose: Evaluate the STM's performance in pediatric trauma victims., Methods: Records from the United States' National Trauma Data Base, a registry of trauma victims developed by the American College of Surgeons, were extracted for the 2007-2009 reporting years. Patients ≤ 18 years of age transported from a trauma scene with complete initial scene data were included in the analysis. Sacco triage scores were assigned to each registry patient, and receiver-operator curves were developed for predicting mortality, along with several secondary outcomes. Area under the receiver-operator curve (AUC) was the main outcome statistic. Sensitivity analysis was performed using a Sacco score without age adjustment, using blunt versus penetrating trauma, and using patients <12 years of age., Results: There were 210,175 pediatric records, of which 90,037 had complete data for analysis. The STM with age adjustment predicted pediatric trauma mortality with an AUC of 0.933 (95% CI: 0.925-0.940). Without the age adjustment term, it predicted mortality with an AUC of 0.924 (95% CI: 0.916-0.933). The STM with age adjustment predicted blunt trauma mortality in 72,467 patients with an AUC of 0.938 (95% CI: 0.929-0.947) and penetrating trauma mortality in 10,099 patients with an AUC of 0.927 (95% CI: 0.911-0.943). These findings did not change significantly when analysis was limited to patients <12 years of age. The Sacco Triage Method was also predictive of some secondary outcomes, such as major injury and death on arrival to the emergency department., Conclusion: The Sacco Triage Method, with or without its age adjustment term, was a highly accurate predictor of mortality in pediatric trauma patients in this registry database. This triage method appears to be a valid strategy for the prioritization of injured children.
- Published
- 2012
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50. Simulation training with structured debriefing improves residents' pediatric disaster triage performance.
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Cicero MX, Auerbach MA, Zigmont J, Riera A, Ching K, and Baum CR
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- Adult, Clinical Competence, Educational Measurement, Female, Humans, Male, Manikins, Patient Simulation, Statistics, Nonparametric, Disaster Medicine education, Education, Medical, Continuing, Emergency Medicine education, Internship and Residency, Pediatrics education, Triage
- Abstract
Introduction: Pediatric disaster medicine (PDM) triage is a vital skill set for pediatricians, and is a required component of residency training by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME). Simulation training is an effective tool for preparing providers for high-stakes, low-frequency events. Debriefing is a learner-centered approach that affords reflection on one's performance, and increases the efficacy of simulation training. The purpose of this study was to measure the efficacy of a multiple-victim simulation in facilitating learners' acquisition of pediatric disaster medicine (PDM) skills, including the JumpSTART triage algorithm. It was hypothesized that multiple patient simulations and a structured debriefing would improve triage performance., Methods: A 10-victim school-shooting scenario was created. Victims were portrayed by adult volunteers, and by high- and low-fidelity simulation manikins that responded physiologically to airway maneuvers. Learners were pediatrics residents. Expected triage levels were not revealed. After a didactic session, learners completed the first simulation. Learners assigned triage levels to all victims, and recorded responses on a standardized form. A group structured debriefing followed the first simulation. The debriefing allowed learners to review the victims and discuss triage rationale. A new 10-victim trauma disaster scenario was presented one week later, and a third scenario was presented five months later. During the second and third scenarios, learners again assigned triage levels to multiple victims. Wilcoxon sign rank tests were used to compare pre- and post-test scores and performance on pre- and post-debriefing simulations., Results: A total of 53 learners completed the educational intervention. Initial mean triage performance was 6.9/10 patients accurately triaged (range = 5-10, SD = 1.3); one week after the structured debriefing, the mean triage performance improved to 8.0/10 patients (range = 5-10, SD = 1.37, P < .0001); five months later, there was maintenance of triage improvement, with a mean triage score of 7.8/10 patients (SD = 1.33, P < .0001). Over-triage of an uninjured child with special health care needs (CSHCN) (67.8% of learners prior to debriefing, 49.0% one week post-debriefing, 26.2% five months post-debriefing) and under-triage of head-injured, unresponsive patients (41.2% of learners pre-debriefing, 37.5% post-debriefing, 11.0% five months post-debriefing) were the most common errors., Conclusions: Structured debriefings are a key component of PDM simulation education, and resulted in improved triage accuracy; the improvement was maintained five months after the educational intervention. Future curricula should emphasize assessment of CSHCN and head-injured patients.
- Published
- 2012
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