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Using Mobile Virtual Reality Simulation to Prepare for In-Person Helping Babies Breathe Training: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial (the eHBB/mHBS Trial)

BACKGROUND: Neonatal mortality accounts for approximately 46% of global under-5 child mortality. The widespread access to mobile devices in low- and middle-income countries has enabled innovations, such as mobile virtual reality (VR), to be leveraged in simulation education for health care workers....

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Autores principales: Ezenwa, Beatrice Nkolika, Umoren, Rachel, Fajolu, Iretiola Bamikeolu, Hippe, Daniel S, Bucher, Sherri, Purkayastha, Saptarshi, Okwako, Felicitas, Esamai, Fabian, Feltner, John B, Olawuyi, Olubukola, Mmboga, Annet, Nafula, Mary Concepta, Paton, Chris, Ezeaka, Veronica Chinyere
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9513689/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36094807
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/37297
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author Ezenwa, Beatrice Nkolika
Umoren, Rachel
Fajolu, Iretiola Bamikeolu
Hippe, Daniel S
Bucher, Sherri
Purkayastha, Saptarshi
Okwako, Felicitas
Esamai, Fabian
Feltner, John B
Olawuyi, Olubukola
Mmboga, Annet
Nafula, Mary Concepta
Paton, Chris
Ezeaka, Veronica Chinyere
author_facet Ezenwa, Beatrice Nkolika
Umoren, Rachel
Fajolu, Iretiola Bamikeolu
Hippe, Daniel S
Bucher, Sherri
Purkayastha, Saptarshi
Okwako, Felicitas
Esamai, Fabian
Feltner, John B
Olawuyi, Olubukola
Mmboga, Annet
Nafula, Mary Concepta
Paton, Chris
Ezeaka, Veronica Chinyere
author_sort Ezenwa, Beatrice Nkolika
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Neonatal mortality accounts for approximately 46% of global under-5 child mortality. The widespread access to mobile devices in low- and middle-income countries has enabled innovations, such as mobile virtual reality (VR), to be leveraged in simulation education for health care workers. OBJECTIVE: This study explores the feasibility and educational efficacy of using mobile VR for the precourse preparation of health care professionals in neonatal resuscitation training. METHODS: Health care professionals in obstetrics and newborn care units at 20 secondary and tertiary health care facilities in Lagos, Nigeria, and Busia, Western Kenya, who had not received training in Helping Babies Breathe (HBB) within the past 1 year were randomized to access the electronic HBB VR simulation and digitized HBB Provider’s Guide (VR group) or the digitized HBB Provider’s Guide only (control group). A sample size of 91 participants per group was calculated based on the main study protocol that was previously published. Participants were directed to use the electronic HBB VR simulation and digitized HBB Provider’s Guide or the digitized HBB Provider’s Guide alone for a minimum of 20 minutes. HBB knowledge and skills assessments were then conducted, which were immediately followed by a standard, in-person HBB training course that was led by study staff and used standard HBB evaluation tools and the Neonatalie Live manikin (Laerdal Medical). RESULTS: A total of 179 nurses and midwives participated (VR group: n=91; control group: n=88). The overall performance scores on the knowledge check (P=.29), bag and mask ventilation skills check (P=.34), and Objective Structured Clinical Examination A checklist (P=.43) were similar between groups, with low overall pass rates (6/178, 3.4% of participants). During the Objective Structured Clinical Examination A test, participants in the VR group performed better on the critical step of positioning the head and clearing the airway (VR group: 77/90, 86%; control group: 57/88, 65%; P=.002). The median percentage of ventilations that were performed via head tilt, as recorded by the Neonatalie Live manikin, was also numerically higher in the VR group (75%, IQR 9%-98%) than in the control group (62%, IQR 13%-97%), though not statistically significantly different (P=.35). Participants in the control group performed better on the identifying a helper and reviewing the emergency plan step (VR group: 7/90, 8%; control group: 16/88, 18%; P=.045) and the washing hands step (VR group: 20/90, 22%; control group: 32/88, 36%; P=.048). CONCLUSIONS: The use of digital interventions, such as mobile VR simulations, may be a viable approach to precourse preparation in neonatal resuscitation training for health care professionals in low- and middle-income countries.
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spelling pubmed-95136892022-09-28 Using Mobile Virtual Reality Simulation to Prepare for In-Person Helping Babies Breathe Training: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial (the eHBB/mHBS Trial) Ezenwa, Beatrice Nkolika Umoren, Rachel Fajolu, Iretiola Bamikeolu Hippe, Daniel S Bucher, Sherri Purkayastha, Saptarshi Okwako, Felicitas Esamai, Fabian Feltner, John B Olawuyi, Olubukola Mmboga, Annet Nafula, Mary Concepta Paton, Chris Ezeaka, Veronica Chinyere JMIR Med Educ Original Paper BACKGROUND: Neonatal mortality accounts for approximately 46% of global under-5 child mortality. The widespread access to mobile devices in low- and middle-income countries has enabled innovations, such as mobile virtual reality (VR), to be leveraged in simulation education for health care workers. OBJECTIVE: This study explores the feasibility and educational efficacy of using mobile VR for the precourse preparation of health care professionals in neonatal resuscitation training. METHODS: Health care professionals in obstetrics and newborn care units at 20 secondary and tertiary health care facilities in Lagos, Nigeria, and Busia, Western Kenya, who had not received training in Helping Babies Breathe (HBB) within the past 1 year were randomized to access the electronic HBB VR simulation and digitized HBB Provider’s Guide (VR group) or the digitized HBB Provider’s Guide only (control group). A sample size of 91 participants per group was calculated based on the main study protocol that was previously published. Participants were directed to use the electronic HBB VR simulation and digitized HBB Provider’s Guide or the digitized HBB Provider’s Guide alone for a minimum of 20 minutes. HBB knowledge and skills assessments were then conducted, which were immediately followed by a standard, in-person HBB training course that was led by study staff and used standard HBB evaluation tools and the Neonatalie Live manikin (Laerdal Medical). RESULTS: A total of 179 nurses and midwives participated (VR group: n=91; control group: n=88). The overall performance scores on the knowledge check (P=.29), bag and mask ventilation skills check (P=.34), and Objective Structured Clinical Examination A checklist (P=.43) were similar between groups, with low overall pass rates (6/178, 3.4% of participants). During the Objective Structured Clinical Examination A test, participants in the VR group performed better on the critical step of positioning the head and clearing the airway (VR group: 77/90, 86%; control group: 57/88, 65%; P=.002). The median percentage of ventilations that were performed via head tilt, as recorded by the Neonatalie Live manikin, was also numerically higher in the VR group (75%, IQR 9%-98%) than in the control group (62%, IQR 13%-97%), though not statistically significantly different (P=.35). Participants in the control group performed better on the identifying a helper and reviewing the emergency plan step (VR group: 7/90, 8%; control group: 16/88, 18%; P=.045) and the washing hands step (VR group: 20/90, 22%; control group: 32/88, 36%; P=.048). CONCLUSIONS: The use of digital interventions, such as mobile VR simulations, may be a viable approach to precourse preparation in neonatal resuscitation training for health care professionals in low- and middle-income countries. JMIR Publications 2022-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9513689/ /pubmed/36094807 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/37297 Text en ©Beatrice Nkolika Ezenwa, Rachel Umoren, Iretiola Bamikeolu Fajolu, Daniel S Hippe, Sherri Bucher, Saptarshi Purkayastha, Felicitas Okwako, Fabian Esamai, John B Feltner, Olubukola Olawuyi, Annet Mmboga, Mary Concepta Nafula, Chris Paton, Veronica Chinyere Ezeaka. Originally published in JMIR Medical Education (https://mededu.jmir.org), 12.09.2022. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Medical Education, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://mededu.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Ezenwa, Beatrice Nkolika
Umoren, Rachel
Fajolu, Iretiola Bamikeolu
Hippe, Daniel S
Bucher, Sherri
Purkayastha, Saptarshi
Okwako, Felicitas
Esamai, Fabian
Feltner, John B
Olawuyi, Olubukola
Mmboga, Annet
Nafula, Mary Concepta
Paton, Chris
Ezeaka, Veronica Chinyere
Using Mobile Virtual Reality Simulation to Prepare for In-Person Helping Babies Breathe Training: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial (the eHBB/mHBS Trial)
title Using Mobile Virtual Reality Simulation to Prepare for In-Person Helping Babies Breathe Training: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial (the eHBB/mHBS Trial)
title_full Using Mobile Virtual Reality Simulation to Prepare for In-Person Helping Babies Breathe Training: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial (the eHBB/mHBS Trial)
title_fullStr Using Mobile Virtual Reality Simulation to Prepare for In-Person Helping Babies Breathe Training: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial (the eHBB/mHBS Trial)
title_full_unstemmed Using Mobile Virtual Reality Simulation to Prepare for In-Person Helping Babies Breathe Training: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial (the eHBB/mHBS Trial)
title_short Using Mobile Virtual Reality Simulation to Prepare for In-Person Helping Babies Breathe Training: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial (the eHBB/mHBS Trial)
title_sort using mobile virtual reality simulation to prepare for in-person helping babies breathe training: secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial (the ehbb/mhbs trial)
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9513689/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36094807
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/37297
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