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Improving prehospital traumatic shock care: implementation and clinical effectiveness of a pragmatic, quasi-experimental trial in a resource-constrained South African setting

OBJECTIVES: This project seeks to improve providers’ practices and patient outcomes from prehospital (ie, ambulance-based) trauma care in a middle-income country using a novel implementation strategy to introduce a bundled clinical intervention. DESIGN: We conduct a two-arm, controlled, mixed-method...

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Autores principales: Mould-Millman, Nee-Kofi, Dixon, Julia, Beaty, Brenda L, Suresh, Krithika, de Vries, Shaheem, Bester, Beatrix, Moreira, Fabio, Cunningham, Charmaine, Moodley, Kubendhren, Cermak, Radomir, Schauer, Steven G, Maddry, Joseph K, Bills, Corey B, Havranek, Edward P, Bebarta, Vikhyat S, Ginde, Adit A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10151988/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37185181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-060338
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author Mould-Millman, Nee-Kofi
Dixon, Julia
Beaty, Brenda L
Suresh, Krithika
de Vries, Shaheem
Bester, Beatrix
Moreira, Fabio
Cunningham, Charmaine
Moodley, Kubendhren
Cermak, Radomir
Schauer, Steven G
Maddry, Joseph K
Bills, Corey B
Havranek, Edward P
Bebarta, Vikhyat S
Ginde, Adit A
author_facet Mould-Millman, Nee-Kofi
Dixon, Julia
Beaty, Brenda L
Suresh, Krithika
de Vries, Shaheem
Bester, Beatrix
Moreira, Fabio
Cunningham, Charmaine
Moodley, Kubendhren
Cermak, Radomir
Schauer, Steven G
Maddry, Joseph K
Bills, Corey B
Havranek, Edward P
Bebarta, Vikhyat S
Ginde, Adit A
author_sort Mould-Millman, Nee-Kofi
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: This project seeks to improve providers’ practices and patient outcomes from prehospital (ie, ambulance-based) trauma care in a middle-income country using a novel implementation strategy to introduce a bundled clinical intervention. DESIGN: We conduct a two-arm, controlled, mixed-methods, hybrid type II study. SETTING: This study was conducted in the Western Cape Government Emergency Medical Services (EMS) system of South Africa. INTERVENTIONS: We pragmatically implemented a simplified prehospital bundle of trauma care (with five core elements) using a novel workplace-based, peer-to-peer, rapid training format. We assigned the intervention and control sites. OUTCOME MEASURES: We assessed implementation effectiveness among EMS providers and stakeholders, using the RE-AIM framework. Clinical effectiveness was assessed at the patient level, using changes in Shock Index x Age (SIxAge). Indices and cut-offs were established a priori. We performed a difference-in-differences (D-I-D) analysis with a multivariable mixed effects model. RESULTS: 198 of 240 (82.5%) EMS providers participated, 93 (47%) intervention and 105 (53%) control, with similar baseline characteristics. The overall implementation effectiveness was excellent (80.6%): reach was good (65%), effectiveness was excellent (87%), implementation fidelity was good (72%) and adoption was excellent (87%). Participants and stakeholders generally reported very high satisfaction with the implementation strategy citing that it was a strong operational fit and effective educational model for their organisation. A total of 770 patients were included: 329 (42.7%) interventions and 441 (57.3%) controls, with no baseline differences. Intervention arm patients had more improved SIxAge compared with control at 4 months, which was not statistically significant (−1.4 D-I-D; p=0.35). There was no significant difference in change of SIxAge over time between the groups for any of the other time intervals (p=0.99). CONCLUSIONS: In this quasi-experimental trial of bundled care using the novel workplace rapid training approach, we found overall excellent implementation effectiveness but no overall statistically significant clinical effectiveness.
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spelling pubmed-101519882023-05-03 Improving prehospital traumatic shock care: implementation and clinical effectiveness of a pragmatic, quasi-experimental trial in a resource-constrained South African setting Mould-Millman, Nee-Kofi Dixon, Julia Beaty, Brenda L Suresh, Krithika de Vries, Shaheem Bester, Beatrix Moreira, Fabio Cunningham, Charmaine Moodley, Kubendhren Cermak, Radomir Schauer, Steven G Maddry, Joseph K Bills, Corey B Havranek, Edward P Bebarta, Vikhyat S Ginde, Adit A BMJ Open Emergency Medicine OBJECTIVES: This project seeks to improve providers’ practices and patient outcomes from prehospital (ie, ambulance-based) trauma care in a middle-income country using a novel implementation strategy to introduce a bundled clinical intervention. DESIGN: We conduct a two-arm, controlled, mixed-methods, hybrid type II study. SETTING: This study was conducted in the Western Cape Government Emergency Medical Services (EMS) system of South Africa. INTERVENTIONS: We pragmatically implemented a simplified prehospital bundle of trauma care (with five core elements) using a novel workplace-based, peer-to-peer, rapid training format. We assigned the intervention and control sites. OUTCOME MEASURES: We assessed implementation effectiveness among EMS providers and stakeholders, using the RE-AIM framework. Clinical effectiveness was assessed at the patient level, using changes in Shock Index x Age (SIxAge). Indices and cut-offs were established a priori. We performed a difference-in-differences (D-I-D) analysis with a multivariable mixed effects model. RESULTS: 198 of 240 (82.5%) EMS providers participated, 93 (47%) intervention and 105 (53%) control, with similar baseline characteristics. The overall implementation effectiveness was excellent (80.6%): reach was good (65%), effectiveness was excellent (87%), implementation fidelity was good (72%) and adoption was excellent (87%). Participants and stakeholders generally reported very high satisfaction with the implementation strategy citing that it was a strong operational fit and effective educational model for their organisation. A total of 770 patients were included: 329 (42.7%) interventions and 441 (57.3%) controls, with no baseline differences. Intervention arm patients had more improved SIxAge compared with control at 4 months, which was not statistically significant (−1.4 D-I-D; p=0.35). There was no significant difference in change of SIxAge over time between the groups for any of the other time intervals (p=0.99). CONCLUSIONS: In this quasi-experimental trial of bundled care using the novel workplace rapid training approach, we found overall excellent implementation effectiveness but no overall statistically significant clinical effectiveness. BMJ Publishing Group 2023-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10151988/ /pubmed/37185181 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-060338 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Mould-Millman, Nee-Kofi
Dixon, Julia
Beaty, Brenda L
Suresh, Krithika
de Vries, Shaheem
Bester, Beatrix
Moreira, Fabio
Cunningham, Charmaine
Moodley, Kubendhren
Cermak, Radomir
Schauer, Steven G
Maddry, Joseph K
Bills, Corey B
Havranek, Edward P
Bebarta, Vikhyat S
Ginde, Adit A
Improving prehospital traumatic shock care: implementation and clinical effectiveness of a pragmatic, quasi-experimental trial in a resource-constrained South African setting
title Improving prehospital traumatic shock care: implementation and clinical effectiveness of a pragmatic, quasi-experimental trial in a resource-constrained South African setting
title_full Improving prehospital traumatic shock care: implementation and clinical effectiveness of a pragmatic, quasi-experimental trial in a resource-constrained South African setting
title_fullStr Improving prehospital traumatic shock care: implementation and clinical effectiveness of a pragmatic, quasi-experimental trial in a resource-constrained South African setting
title_full_unstemmed Improving prehospital traumatic shock care: implementation and clinical effectiveness of a pragmatic, quasi-experimental trial in a resource-constrained South African setting
title_short Improving prehospital traumatic shock care: implementation and clinical effectiveness of a pragmatic, quasi-experimental trial in a resource-constrained South African setting
title_sort improving prehospital traumatic shock care: implementation and clinical effectiveness of a pragmatic, quasi-experimental trial in a resource-constrained south african setting
topic Emergency Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10151988/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37185181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-060338
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