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Expanding scope of Kirkpatrick model from training effectiveness review to evidence-informed prioritization management for cricothyroidotomy simulation

Modified Kirkpatrick model has been adopted to evaluate training effectiveness by 6 categories, including activity accounting (training objectives/success in organization change) at Level-0, reaction (satisfaction) at Level-1, learning (acquisition of surgical airway skills) at Level-2, behavior (po...

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Autores principales: Cheung, Victor Kai-Lam, Chia, Nam-Hung, So, Sze-Sze, Ng, George Wing-Yiu, So, Eric Hang-Kwong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10407669/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37560697
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e18268
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author Cheung, Victor Kai-Lam
Chia, Nam-Hung
So, Sze-Sze
Ng, George Wing-Yiu
So, Eric Hang-Kwong
author_facet Cheung, Victor Kai-Lam
Chia, Nam-Hung
So, Sze-Sze
Ng, George Wing-Yiu
So, Eric Hang-Kwong
author_sort Cheung, Victor Kai-Lam
collection PubMed
description Modified Kirkpatrick model has been adopted to evaluate training effectiveness by 6 categories, including activity accounting (training objectives/success in organization change) at Level-0, reaction (satisfaction) at Level-1, learning (acquisition of surgical airway skills) at Level-2, behavior (post-training change in personal strengths) at Level-3, result (organizational or clinical outcomes) at Level-4, and Return on Investment (ROI) or Expectation (ROE) (monetary and societal values following training and other quality and safety related measures) at Level-5. The purpose of this hospital-based prospective observational study was twofold: i) To evaluate potential impacts on monetary and societal values and successful organization change following implementation of advanced Cricothyroidotomy simulator and standardized curriculum in healthcare simulation training, ii) To inform decisions of resource allocation by reviewing overall values and prioritization strategies for i) general surgeon/emergency physician ii) with seniority >5 years and iii) prior porcine training experience based on findings at Kirkpatrick Level-0, Level-4, and Level-5. Seventy doctors and 10 nurses completed Cricothyroidotomy training and follow-up questionnaires within 2021/22. All training usability scoring measured by Scales of Emergency Surgical Airway Simulator (SESAS-17) achieved over 4 out of 5 (Level-4) with effects in favor of emergency physicians or general surgeons (p < .5), regardless of seniority and prior training experience. Success in organization change (Level-0) and cost-effectiveness (Level-5) were hypothetically established using theoretical framework of Gleicher's formula and Roger's Diffusion of Innovation Theory. Overall training effectiveness, in terms of advantage in usability, cost-benefits and successful organizational changes, provided sound evidence to support continuous investment of new curriculum and innovative simulator and “Surgeon-and-emergency-physician-first” policy when it comes to resources allocation strategies for Cricothyroidotomy training. [ACGME competencies: Practice Based Learning and Improvement, Systems Based Practice.]
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spelling pubmed-104076692023-08-09 Expanding scope of Kirkpatrick model from training effectiveness review to evidence-informed prioritization management for cricothyroidotomy simulation Cheung, Victor Kai-Lam Chia, Nam-Hung So, Sze-Sze Ng, George Wing-Yiu So, Eric Hang-Kwong Heliyon Research Article Modified Kirkpatrick model has been adopted to evaluate training effectiveness by 6 categories, including activity accounting (training objectives/success in organization change) at Level-0, reaction (satisfaction) at Level-1, learning (acquisition of surgical airway skills) at Level-2, behavior (post-training change in personal strengths) at Level-3, result (organizational or clinical outcomes) at Level-4, and Return on Investment (ROI) or Expectation (ROE) (monetary and societal values following training and other quality and safety related measures) at Level-5. The purpose of this hospital-based prospective observational study was twofold: i) To evaluate potential impacts on monetary and societal values and successful organization change following implementation of advanced Cricothyroidotomy simulator and standardized curriculum in healthcare simulation training, ii) To inform decisions of resource allocation by reviewing overall values and prioritization strategies for i) general surgeon/emergency physician ii) with seniority >5 years and iii) prior porcine training experience based on findings at Kirkpatrick Level-0, Level-4, and Level-5. Seventy doctors and 10 nurses completed Cricothyroidotomy training and follow-up questionnaires within 2021/22. All training usability scoring measured by Scales of Emergency Surgical Airway Simulator (SESAS-17) achieved over 4 out of 5 (Level-4) with effects in favor of emergency physicians or general surgeons (p < .5), regardless of seniority and prior training experience. Success in organization change (Level-0) and cost-effectiveness (Level-5) were hypothetically established using theoretical framework of Gleicher's formula and Roger's Diffusion of Innovation Theory. Overall training effectiveness, in terms of advantage in usability, cost-benefits and successful organizational changes, provided sound evidence to support continuous investment of new curriculum and innovative simulator and “Surgeon-and-emergency-physician-first” policy when it comes to resources allocation strategies for Cricothyroidotomy training. [ACGME competencies: Practice Based Learning and Improvement, Systems Based Practice.] Elsevier 2023-07-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10407669/ /pubmed/37560697 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e18268 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Cheung, Victor Kai-Lam
Chia, Nam-Hung
So, Sze-Sze
Ng, George Wing-Yiu
So, Eric Hang-Kwong
Expanding scope of Kirkpatrick model from training effectiveness review to evidence-informed prioritization management for cricothyroidotomy simulation
title Expanding scope of Kirkpatrick model from training effectiveness review to evidence-informed prioritization management for cricothyroidotomy simulation
title_full Expanding scope of Kirkpatrick model from training effectiveness review to evidence-informed prioritization management for cricothyroidotomy simulation
title_fullStr Expanding scope of Kirkpatrick model from training effectiveness review to evidence-informed prioritization management for cricothyroidotomy simulation
title_full_unstemmed Expanding scope of Kirkpatrick model from training effectiveness review to evidence-informed prioritization management for cricothyroidotomy simulation
title_short Expanding scope of Kirkpatrick model from training effectiveness review to evidence-informed prioritization management for cricothyroidotomy simulation
title_sort expanding scope of kirkpatrick model from training effectiveness review to evidence-informed prioritization management for cricothyroidotomy simulation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10407669/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37560697
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e18268
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