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The Influence of Human Factors Training in Air Rescue Service on Patient Safety in Hospitals: Results of an Online Survey

Background: Air rescue crew members work equally in aviation and medicine, and thus occupy an important interface between the two work environments of aviation and medicine. The aim of this study was to obtain responses from participants to a validated online-based questionnaire regarding whether ho...

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Autores principales: von Rüden, Christian, Ewers, Andre, Brand, Andreas, Hungerer, Sven, Erichsen, Christoph J., Dahlmann, Philipp, Werner, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9861563/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36662486
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicines10010002
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author von Rüden, Christian
Ewers, Andre
Brand, Andreas
Hungerer, Sven
Erichsen, Christoph J.
Dahlmann, Philipp
Werner, Daniel
author_facet von Rüden, Christian
Ewers, Andre
Brand, Andreas
Hungerer, Sven
Erichsen, Christoph J.
Dahlmann, Philipp
Werner, Daniel
author_sort von Rüden, Christian
collection PubMed
description Background: Air rescue crew members work equally in aviation and medicine, and thus occupy an important interface between the two work environments of aviation and medicine. The aim of this study was to obtain responses from participants to a validated online-based questionnaire regarding whether hospitals may benefit from the commitment of a medical hospital staff which is also professionally involved in the aviation system as emergency physicians and Helicopter Emergency Medical Services Technical Crew Members (HEMS TC). Furthermore, it focused on the question of whether the skills acquired through Crew Resource Management (CRM) training in the air rescue service might also be used in the ground-based rescue service and, if so, whether they may have a positive effect. Methods: Medical air rescue staff of 37 German air rescue stations was included. Between 27 November 2020 and 03 March 2021, 253 out of 621 employees (response rate: 40.7%) participated voluntarily in a validated anonymized online survey. A quantitative test procedure was performed using the modified questionnaire on teamwork and patient safety (German version). Results: The examination and interpretation of the internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha) resulted in the following reliabilities: Factor I (Cooperation): α = 0.707 (good); Factor II (Human factors): α = 0.853 (very good); Factor III (Communication): α = 0.657 (acceptable); and Factor IV (Safety): α = 0.620 (acceptable). Factor analysis explained 53.1% of the variance. Conclusions: The medical clinicians participating in this online survey believed that the skills they learned in human factors training such as CRM are helpful in their daily routine work in hospitals or other medical facilities, as well as in their ground-based rescue service activities. These findings may result in the recommendation to make CRM available on a regular to the medical staff in all medical facilities and also to ground-based rescue service staff aiming to increase patient safety and employee satisfaction.
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spelling pubmed-98615632023-01-22 The Influence of Human Factors Training in Air Rescue Service on Patient Safety in Hospitals: Results of an Online Survey von Rüden, Christian Ewers, Andre Brand, Andreas Hungerer, Sven Erichsen, Christoph J. Dahlmann, Philipp Werner, Daniel Medicines (Basel) Article Background: Air rescue crew members work equally in aviation and medicine, and thus occupy an important interface between the two work environments of aviation and medicine. The aim of this study was to obtain responses from participants to a validated online-based questionnaire regarding whether hospitals may benefit from the commitment of a medical hospital staff which is also professionally involved in the aviation system as emergency physicians and Helicopter Emergency Medical Services Technical Crew Members (HEMS TC). Furthermore, it focused on the question of whether the skills acquired through Crew Resource Management (CRM) training in the air rescue service might also be used in the ground-based rescue service and, if so, whether they may have a positive effect. Methods: Medical air rescue staff of 37 German air rescue stations was included. Between 27 November 2020 and 03 March 2021, 253 out of 621 employees (response rate: 40.7%) participated voluntarily in a validated anonymized online survey. A quantitative test procedure was performed using the modified questionnaire on teamwork and patient safety (German version). Results: The examination and interpretation of the internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha) resulted in the following reliabilities: Factor I (Cooperation): α = 0.707 (good); Factor II (Human factors): α = 0.853 (very good); Factor III (Communication): α = 0.657 (acceptable); and Factor IV (Safety): α = 0.620 (acceptable). Factor analysis explained 53.1% of the variance. Conclusions: The medical clinicians participating in this online survey believed that the skills they learned in human factors training such as CRM are helpful in their daily routine work in hospitals or other medical facilities, as well as in their ground-based rescue service activities. These findings may result in the recommendation to make CRM available on a regular to the medical staff in all medical facilities and also to ground-based rescue service staff aiming to increase patient safety and employee satisfaction. MDPI 2022-12-22 /pmc/articles/PMC9861563/ /pubmed/36662486 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicines10010002 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
von Rüden, Christian
Ewers, Andre
Brand, Andreas
Hungerer, Sven
Erichsen, Christoph J.
Dahlmann, Philipp
Werner, Daniel
The Influence of Human Factors Training in Air Rescue Service on Patient Safety in Hospitals: Results of an Online Survey
title The Influence of Human Factors Training in Air Rescue Service on Patient Safety in Hospitals: Results of an Online Survey
title_full The Influence of Human Factors Training in Air Rescue Service on Patient Safety in Hospitals: Results of an Online Survey
title_fullStr The Influence of Human Factors Training in Air Rescue Service on Patient Safety in Hospitals: Results of an Online Survey
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Human Factors Training in Air Rescue Service on Patient Safety in Hospitals: Results of an Online Survey
title_short The Influence of Human Factors Training in Air Rescue Service on Patient Safety in Hospitals: Results of an Online Survey
title_sort influence of human factors training in air rescue service on patient safety in hospitals: results of an online survey
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9861563/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36662486
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicines10010002
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