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COVID-19 advanced respiratory care educational training programme for healthcare workers in Lesotho: an observational study

OBJECTIVE: To develop and implement a ‘low-dose, high-frequency’ (LDHF) advanced respiratory care training programme for COVID-19 care in Lesotho. DESIGN: Prospective pretraining–post-training evaluation. SETTING: Lesotho has limited capacity in advanced respiratory care. PARTICIPANTS: Physicians an...

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Autores principales: Osula, Valerie O, Sanders, Jill E, Chakare, Tafadzwa, Mapota-Masoabi, Lucy, Ranyali-Otubanjo, Makhoase, Hansoti, Bhakti, McCollum, Eric D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9058317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35487754
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058643
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author Osula, Valerie O
Sanders, Jill E
Chakare, Tafadzwa
Mapota-Masoabi, Lucy
Ranyali-Otubanjo, Makhoase
Hansoti, Bhakti
McCollum, Eric D
author_facet Osula, Valerie O
Sanders, Jill E
Chakare, Tafadzwa
Mapota-Masoabi, Lucy
Ranyali-Otubanjo, Makhoase
Hansoti, Bhakti
McCollum, Eric D
author_sort Osula, Valerie O
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To develop and implement a ‘low-dose, high-frequency’ (LDHF) advanced respiratory care training programme for COVID-19 care in Lesotho. DESIGN: Prospective pretraining–post-training evaluation. SETTING: Lesotho has limited capacity in advanced respiratory care. PARTICIPANTS: Physicians and nurses. INTERVENTIONS: Due to limited participation in May–September 2020, the LDHF approach was modified into a traditional 1-day offsite training in November 2020 that reviewed respiratory anatomy and physiology, clinical principles for conventional oxygen, heated high-flow nasal cannula and non-invasive ventilation management. Basic mechanical ventilation principles were introduced. OUTCOME MEASURES: Participants completed a 20-question multiple choice examination immediately before and after the 1-day training. Paired t-tests were used to evaluate the difference in average participant pretraining and post-training examination scores. RESULTS: Pretraining and post-training examinations were completed by 46/53 (86.7%) participants, of whom 93.4% (n=43) were nurses. The overall mean pretraining score was 44.8% (SD 12.4%). Mean scores improved by an average of 23.7 percentage points (95% CI 19.7 to 27.6, p<0.001) on the post-training examination to a mean score of 68.5% (SD 13.6%). Performance on basic and advanced respiratory categories also improved by 17.7 (95% CI 11.6 to 23.8) and 25.6 percentage points (95% CI 20.4 to 30.8) (p<0.001). Likewise, mean examination scores increased on the post-training test, compared with pretraining, for questions related to respiratory management (29.6 percentage points, 95% CI 24.1 to 35.0) and physiology (17.4 percentage points, 95% CI 12.0 to 22.8). CONCLUSIONS: An LDHF training approach was not feasible during this early emergency period of the COVID-19 pandemic in Lesotho. Despite clear knowledge gains, the modest post-training examination scores coupled with limited physician engagement suggest healthcare workers require alternative educational strategies before higher advanced care like mechanical ventilation is implementable. Conventional and high-flow oxygen is better aligned with post-training healthcare worker knowledge levels and rapid implementation.
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spelling pubmed-90583172022-05-06 COVID-19 advanced respiratory care educational training programme for healthcare workers in Lesotho: an observational study Osula, Valerie O Sanders, Jill E Chakare, Tafadzwa Mapota-Masoabi, Lucy Ranyali-Otubanjo, Makhoase Hansoti, Bhakti McCollum, Eric D BMJ Open Global Health OBJECTIVE: To develop and implement a ‘low-dose, high-frequency’ (LDHF) advanced respiratory care training programme for COVID-19 care in Lesotho. DESIGN: Prospective pretraining–post-training evaluation. SETTING: Lesotho has limited capacity in advanced respiratory care. PARTICIPANTS: Physicians and nurses. INTERVENTIONS: Due to limited participation in May–September 2020, the LDHF approach was modified into a traditional 1-day offsite training in November 2020 that reviewed respiratory anatomy and physiology, clinical principles for conventional oxygen, heated high-flow nasal cannula and non-invasive ventilation management. Basic mechanical ventilation principles were introduced. OUTCOME MEASURES: Participants completed a 20-question multiple choice examination immediately before and after the 1-day training. Paired t-tests were used to evaluate the difference in average participant pretraining and post-training examination scores. RESULTS: Pretraining and post-training examinations were completed by 46/53 (86.7%) participants, of whom 93.4% (n=43) were nurses. The overall mean pretraining score was 44.8% (SD 12.4%). Mean scores improved by an average of 23.7 percentage points (95% CI 19.7 to 27.6, p<0.001) on the post-training examination to a mean score of 68.5% (SD 13.6%). Performance on basic and advanced respiratory categories also improved by 17.7 (95% CI 11.6 to 23.8) and 25.6 percentage points (95% CI 20.4 to 30.8) (p<0.001). Likewise, mean examination scores increased on the post-training test, compared with pretraining, for questions related to respiratory management (29.6 percentage points, 95% CI 24.1 to 35.0) and physiology (17.4 percentage points, 95% CI 12.0 to 22.8). CONCLUSIONS: An LDHF training approach was not feasible during this early emergency period of the COVID-19 pandemic in Lesotho. Despite clear knowledge gains, the modest post-training examination scores coupled with limited physician engagement suggest healthcare workers require alternative educational strategies before higher advanced care like mechanical ventilation is implementable. Conventional and high-flow oxygen is better aligned with post-training healthcare worker knowledge levels and rapid implementation. BMJ Publishing Group 2022-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9058317/ /pubmed/35487754 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058643 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. 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 Global Health
Osula, Valerie O
Sanders, Jill E
Chakare, Tafadzwa
Mapota-Masoabi, Lucy
Ranyali-Otubanjo, Makhoase
Hansoti, Bhakti
McCollum, Eric D
COVID-19 advanced respiratory care educational training programme for healthcare workers in Lesotho: an observational study
title COVID-19 advanced respiratory care educational training programme for healthcare workers in Lesotho: an observational study
title_full COVID-19 advanced respiratory care educational training programme for healthcare workers in Lesotho: an observational study
title_fullStr COVID-19 advanced respiratory care educational training programme for healthcare workers in Lesotho: an observational study
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19 advanced respiratory care educational training programme for healthcare workers in Lesotho: an observational study
title_short COVID-19 advanced respiratory care educational training programme for healthcare workers in Lesotho: an observational study
title_sort covid-19 advanced respiratory care educational training programme for healthcare workers in lesotho: an observational study
topic Global Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9058317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35487754
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058643
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