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First aid in acute stroke: Introducing a concept of first action to laypersons

OBJECTIVE: First aid training is well established to teach the public how to recognize a medical emergency and take appropriate action. Though it is now handled as a high priority emergency stroke is not among the main topics of first aid. We investigated if first aid training may be useful for enha...

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Autores principales: Handschu, René, Reitmayer, Michael, Raschick, Marlitt, Erbguth, Frank, Neundörfer, Bernhard, Babjar, Elisabeth
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Steinkopff-Verlag 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1705488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16896518
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-006-0219-7
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author Handschu, René
Reitmayer, Michael
Raschick, Marlitt
Erbguth, Frank
Neundörfer, Bernhard
Babjar, Elisabeth
author_facet Handschu, René
Reitmayer, Michael
Raschick, Marlitt
Erbguth, Frank
Neundörfer, Bernhard
Babjar, Elisabeth
author_sort Handschu, René
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: First aid training is well established to teach the public how to recognize a medical emergency and take appropriate action. Though it is now handled as a high priority emergency stroke is not among the main topics of first aid. We investigated if first aid training may be useful for enhancing stroke awareness. METHODS: We developed a 15–20 minute teaching session about stroke as an emergency including signs and symptoms and first hands-on measures. The session was integrated in standard first aid training of the St John Ambulance of Germany and participants were asked to fill out a questionnaire regarding their knowledge about stroke. Subjects were questioned before the stroke lesson and again at the end of the training. RESULTS: 532 participants of the training responded to the questionnaire (mean age 28.6 years, 53.6% male). There was a significant increase in proportion of subjects correctly defining what stroke is (28.4% vs. 69.9%, p < 0,001) and in the mean number of stroke symptoms listed (1.52 vs. 3.35, p < 0,001) by the participants. The number of participants unable to list at least 1 symptom decreased significantly (12.8 vs. 3.6%, p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: In our study a teaching lesson integrated in first aid training was effective in improving stroke knowledge of participants. First aid training should be used for stroke information complementary to other activities like mass media campaigns as it is effective, could reach younger people that are not primarily interested in stroke and provides connections to other health topics.
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spelling pubmed-17054882006-12-18 First aid in acute stroke: Introducing a concept of first action to laypersons Handschu, René Reitmayer, Michael Raschick, Marlitt Erbguth, Frank Neundörfer, Bernhard Babjar, Elisabeth J Neurol Original Communication OBJECTIVE: First aid training is well established to teach the public how to recognize a medical emergency and take appropriate action. Though it is now handled as a high priority emergency stroke is not among the main topics of first aid. We investigated if first aid training may be useful for enhancing stroke awareness. METHODS: We developed a 15–20 minute teaching session about stroke as an emergency including signs and symptoms and first hands-on measures. The session was integrated in standard first aid training of the St John Ambulance of Germany and participants were asked to fill out a questionnaire regarding their knowledge about stroke. Subjects were questioned before the stroke lesson and again at the end of the training. RESULTS: 532 participants of the training responded to the questionnaire (mean age 28.6 years, 53.6% male). There was a significant increase in proportion of subjects correctly defining what stroke is (28.4% vs. 69.9%, p < 0,001) and in the mean number of stroke symptoms listed (1.52 vs. 3.35, p < 0,001) by the participants. The number of participants unable to list at least 1 symptom decreased significantly (12.8 vs. 3.6%, p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: In our study a teaching lesson integrated in first aid training was effective in improving stroke knowledge of participants. First aid training should be used for stroke information complementary to other activities like mass media campaigns as it is effective, could reach younger people that are not primarily interested in stroke and provides connections to other health topics. Steinkopff-Verlag 2006-08-02 2006-10 /pmc/articles/PMC1705488/ /pubmed/16896518 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-006-0219-7 Text en © Steinkopff Verlag Darmstadt 2006
spellingShingle Original Communication
Handschu, René
Reitmayer, Michael
Raschick, Marlitt
Erbguth, Frank
Neundörfer, Bernhard
Babjar, Elisabeth
First aid in acute stroke: Introducing a concept of first action to laypersons
title First aid in acute stroke: Introducing a concept of first action to laypersons
title_full First aid in acute stroke: Introducing a concept of first action to laypersons
title_fullStr First aid in acute stroke: Introducing a concept of first action to laypersons
title_full_unstemmed First aid in acute stroke: Introducing a concept of first action to laypersons
title_short First aid in acute stroke: Introducing a concept of first action to laypersons
title_sort first aid in acute stroke: introducing a concept of first action to laypersons
topic Original Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1705488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16896518
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-006-0219-7
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