Cargando…

Clinical decision-making: midwifery students' recognition of, and response to, post partum haemorrhage in the simulation environment

BACKGROUND: This paper reports the findings of a study of how midwifery students responded to a simulated post partum haemorrhage (PPH). Internationally, 25% of maternal deaths are attributed to severe haemorrhage. Although this figure is far higher in developing countries, the risk to maternal well...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Scholes, Julie, Endacott, Ruth, Biro, MaryAnne, Bulle, Bree, Cooper, Simon, Miles, Maureen, Gilmour, Carole, Buykx, Penny, Kinsman, Leigh, Boland, Rosemarie, Jones, Jan, Zaidi, Fawzia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3352065/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22443712
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-12-19
_version_ 1782232840350466048
author Scholes, Julie
Endacott, Ruth
Biro, MaryAnne
Bulle, Bree
Cooper, Simon
Miles, Maureen
Gilmour, Carole
Buykx, Penny
Kinsman, Leigh
Boland, Rosemarie
Jones, Jan
Zaidi, Fawzia
author_facet Scholes, Julie
Endacott, Ruth
Biro, MaryAnne
Bulle, Bree
Cooper, Simon
Miles, Maureen
Gilmour, Carole
Buykx, Penny
Kinsman, Leigh
Boland, Rosemarie
Jones, Jan
Zaidi, Fawzia
author_sort Scholes, Julie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: This paper reports the findings of a study of how midwifery students responded to a simulated post partum haemorrhage (PPH). Internationally, 25% of maternal deaths are attributed to severe haemorrhage. Although this figure is far higher in developing countries, the risk to maternal wellbeing and child health problem means that all midwives need to remain vigilant and respond appropriately to early signs of maternal deterioration. METHODS: Simulation using a patient actress enabled the research team to investigate the way in which 35 midwifery students made decisions in a dynamic high fidelity PPH scenario. The actress wore a birthing suit that simulated blood loss and a flaccid uterus on palpation. The scenario provided low levels of uncertainty and high levels of relevant information. The student's response to the scenario was videoed. Immediately after, they were invited to review the video, reflect on their performance and give a commentary as to what affected their decisions. The data were analysed using Dimensional Analysis. RESULTS: The students' clinical management of the situation varied considerably. Students struggled to prioritise their actions where more than one response was required to a clinical cue and did not necessarily use mnemonics as heuristic devices to guide their actions. Driven by a response to single cues they also showed a reluctance to formulate a diagnosis based on inductive and deductive reasoning cycles. This meant they did not necessarily introduce new hypothetical ideas against which they might refute or confirm a diagnosis and thereby eliminate fixation error. CONCLUSIONS: The students response demonstrated that a number of clinical skills require updating on a regular basis including: fundal massage technique, the use of emergency standing order drugs, communication and delegation of tasks to others in an emergency and working independently until help arrives. Heuristic devices helped the students to evaluate their interventions to illuminate what else could be done whilst they awaited the emergency team. They did not necessarily serve to prompt the students' or help them plan care prospectively. The limitations of the study are critically explored along with the pedagogic implications for initial training and continuing professional development.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3352065
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-33520652012-05-16 Clinical decision-making: midwifery students' recognition of, and response to, post partum haemorrhage in the simulation environment Scholes, Julie Endacott, Ruth Biro, MaryAnne Bulle, Bree Cooper, Simon Miles, Maureen Gilmour, Carole Buykx, Penny Kinsman, Leigh Boland, Rosemarie Jones, Jan Zaidi, Fawzia BMC Pregnancy Childbirth Research Article BACKGROUND: This paper reports the findings of a study of how midwifery students responded to a simulated post partum haemorrhage (PPH). Internationally, 25% of maternal deaths are attributed to severe haemorrhage. Although this figure is far higher in developing countries, the risk to maternal wellbeing and child health problem means that all midwives need to remain vigilant and respond appropriately to early signs of maternal deterioration. METHODS: Simulation using a patient actress enabled the research team to investigate the way in which 35 midwifery students made decisions in a dynamic high fidelity PPH scenario. The actress wore a birthing suit that simulated blood loss and a flaccid uterus on palpation. The scenario provided low levels of uncertainty and high levels of relevant information. The student's response to the scenario was videoed. Immediately after, they were invited to review the video, reflect on their performance and give a commentary as to what affected their decisions. The data were analysed using Dimensional Analysis. RESULTS: The students' clinical management of the situation varied considerably. Students struggled to prioritise their actions where more than one response was required to a clinical cue and did not necessarily use mnemonics as heuristic devices to guide their actions. Driven by a response to single cues they also showed a reluctance to formulate a diagnosis based on inductive and deductive reasoning cycles. This meant they did not necessarily introduce new hypothetical ideas against which they might refute or confirm a diagnosis and thereby eliminate fixation error. CONCLUSIONS: The students response demonstrated that a number of clinical skills require updating on a regular basis including: fundal massage technique, the use of emergency standing order drugs, communication and delegation of tasks to others in an emergency and working independently until help arrives. Heuristic devices helped the students to evaluate their interventions to illuminate what else could be done whilst they awaited the emergency team. They did not necessarily serve to prompt the students' or help them plan care prospectively. The limitations of the study are critically explored along with the pedagogic implications for initial training and continuing professional development. BioMed Central 2012-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3352065/ /pubmed/22443712 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-12-19 Text en Copyright ©2012 Scholes et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Scholes, Julie
Endacott, Ruth
Biro, MaryAnne
Bulle, Bree
Cooper, Simon
Miles, Maureen
Gilmour, Carole
Buykx, Penny
Kinsman, Leigh
Boland, Rosemarie
Jones, Jan
Zaidi, Fawzia
Clinical decision-making: midwifery students' recognition of, and response to, post partum haemorrhage in the simulation environment
title Clinical decision-making: midwifery students' recognition of, and response to, post partum haemorrhage in the simulation environment
title_full Clinical decision-making: midwifery students' recognition of, and response to, post partum haemorrhage in the simulation environment
title_fullStr Clinical decision-making: midwifery students' recognition of, and response to, post partum haemorrhage in the simulation environment
title_full_unstemmed Clinical decision-making: midwifery students' recognition of, and response to, post partum haemorrhage in the simulation environment
title_short Clinical decision-making: midwifery students' recognition of, and response to, post partum haemorrhage in the simulation environment
title_sort clinical decision-making: midwifery students' recognition of, and response to, post partum haemorrhage in the simulation environment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3352065/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22443712
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-12-19
work_keys_str_mv AT scholesjulie clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT endacottruth clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT biromaryanne clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT bullebree clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT coopersimon clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT milesmaureen clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT gilmourcarole clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT buykxpenny clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT kinsmanleigh clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT bolandrosemarie clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT jonesjan clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment
AT zaidifawzia clinicaldecisionmakingmidwiferystudentsrecognitionofandresponsetopostpartumhaemorrhageinthesimulationenvironment