2015
Variability in quality of chest compressions provided during simulated cardiac arrest across nine pediatric institutions
Cheng A, Hunt EA, Grant D, Lin Y, Grant V, Duff JP, White ML, Peterson DT, Zhong J, Gottesman R, Sudikoff S, Doan Q, Nadkarni VM, Brown L, Overly F, Bank I, Bhanji F, Kessler D, Tofil N, Davidson J, Adler M, Bragg A, Marohn K, Robertson N, Duval-Arnould J, Wong H, Donoghue A, Chatfield J, Chime N. Variability in quality of chest compressions provided during simulated cardiac arrest across nine pediatric institutions. Resuscitation 2015, 97: 13-19. PMID: 26417701, DOI: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2015.08.024.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsCardiopulmonary ResuscitationChildFeedback, SensoryFemaleHeart ArrestHospitals, PediatricHumansMaleProspective StudiesSimulation TrainingConceptsQuality of CPRCardiac arrestPediatric institutionIntervention groupCompression depthMedian chest compression depthAmerican Heart Association guidelinesCPR qualityMultiple pediatric institutionsHeart Association guidelinesMulti-center trialCPR trainingVisual feedback groupProportion of compressionsVisual feedbackChest compression depthAssociation guidelinesChest compressionsSecondary analysisJIT trainingTraining groupImproving Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation With a CPR Feedback Device and Refresher Simulations (CPR CARES Study): A Randomized Clinical Trial
Cheng A, Brown LL, Duff JP, Davidson J, Overly F, Tofil NM, Peterson DT, White ML, Bhanji F, Bank I, Gottesman R, Adler M, Zhong J, Grant V, Grant DJ, Sudikoff SN, Marohn K, Charnovich A, Hunt EA, Kessler DO, Wong H, Robertson N, Lin Y, Doan Q, Duval-Arnould JM, Nadkarni VM. Improving Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation With a CPR Feedback Device and Refresher Simulations (CPR CARES Study): A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Pediatrics 2015, 169: 137-144. PMID: 25531167, DOI: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2014.2616.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAmerican Heart Association guidelinesHeart Association guidelinesHealth care professionalsCardiopulmonary arrestSimulated cardiopulmonary arrestQuality of CPRCardiopulmonary resuscitationAssociation guidelinesCare professionalsChest compressionsJIT trainingMost health care professionalsFactorial design trialPediatric cardiopulmonary arrestNeurological outcomeCPR timeClinical trialsCPR feedback deviceMAIN OUTCOMEBetter outcomesControl groupResuscitation teamVisual feedbackCC rateHigh compliance
2009
High-Fidelity Medical Simulation as a Technique to Improve Pediatric Residents' Emergency Airway Management and Teamwork
Sudikoff SN, Overly FL, Shapiro MJ. High-Fidelity Medical Simulation as a Technique to Improve Pediatric Residents' Emergency Airway Management and Teamwork. Pediatric Emergency Care 2009, 25: 651-656. PMID: 21465692, DOI: 10.1097/pec.0b013e3181bd93ea.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2007
High-Fidelity Medical Simulation as an Assessment Tool for Pediatric Residents' Airway Management Skills
Overly FL, Sudikoff SN, Shapiro MJ. High-Fidelity Medical Simulation as an Assessment Tool for Pediatric Residents' Airway Management Skills. Pediatric Emergency Care 2007, 23: 11-15. PMID: 17228214, DOI: 10.1097/pec.0b013e31802c61d5.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsRapid sequence inductionAirway management skillsSequence inductionPediatric residents' abilitySevere respiratory distressEndotracheal tube sizeCuffed endotracheal tubeResidents' abilityBag-valve maskEnd-tidal carbon dioxide detectorAssessment toolHigh-fidelity medical simulationAcute airwayRespiratory depressionRespiratory failurePediatric airwayCricoid pressureRespiratory distressNasogastric tubeEndotracheal tubeObservational studyAlcohol intoxicationAirwayLaryngoscope bladePediatric residents