Heymer Johannes, Räpple Daniel, Ott Matthias, Dengler Florian, Jaki Christina, Bent Daniel, Hegar Anna
Department of Internal Medicine, Klinikum Stuttgart, Kriegsbergstraße 60, 70174 Stuttgart, Germany.
Department of Anesthesiology, Surgical Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine, and Pain Management, Klinikum Stuttgart, Kriegsbergstraße 60, 70174 Stuttgart, Germany.
Resusc Plus. 2025 Mar 20;23:100936. doi: 10.1016/j.resplu.2025.100936. eCollection 2025 May.
The use of personal protective equipment (PPE) is essential during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to prevent disease transmission, but its impact on rescuer fatigue and CPR quality remains debated.
To simultaneously evaluate the effect of PPE on cognitive load and resuscitation quality.
In a simulation-based trial at a German tertiary care hospital, 31 healthcare workers performed two 2-minute chest compression (CC) cycles on a manikin, once with PPE and once without. Compression quality (rate, depth, hand position, chest recoil) was assessed. Cognitive load was measured post-task using NASA- and Simulation Task Load Index (NASA- and SIM-TLX). Primary outcome was the difference in cognitive load with and without PPE, and secondary outcomes included differences in CC quality parameters.
SIM-TLX identified a significant impact of PPE on task complexity and perceptual strain, while situational stress, distractions, task control, and NASA-TLX parameters (mental, physical, temporal demand, frustration, effort, performance) showed no significant differences. No significant differences were found in compression rate (113 bpm without PPE vs. 109 bpm with PPE), depth (61 mm without vs. 62 mm with PPE), correct hand position (81% without vs. 78% with PPE), and complete chest recoil (94% without vs. 84% with PPE). However not significant, PPE use showed more negative outliers in hand position and chest recoil.
PPE increases values on two subscales of the SIM-TLX (task complexity and perceptual strain), but does not significantly impact chest compression quality in CPR simulations.
在心肺复苏(CPR)过程中使用个人防护装备(PPE)对于预防疾病传播至关重要,但其对施救者疲劳和心肺复苏质量的影响仍存在争议。
同时评估个人防护装备对认知负荷和复苏质量的影响。
在德国一家三级护理医院进行的一项基于模拟的试验中,31名医护人员在模拟人上进行了两个2分钟的胸外按压(CC)周期,一次佩戴个人防护装备,一次不佩戴。评估按压质量(速率、深度、手部位置、胸廓回弹)。任务完成后使用美国国家航空航天局任务负荷指数(NASA - TLX)和模拟任务负荷指数(SIM - TLX)测量认知负荷。主要结果是佩戴和不佩戴个人防护装备时认知负荷的差异,次要结果包括胸外按压质量参数的差异。
SIM - TLX显示个人防护装备对任务复杂性和感知压力有显著影响,而情境压力、干扰、任务控制以及NASA - TLX参数(心理、身体、时间需求、挫折感、努力程度、表现)无显著差异。胸外按压速率(不佩戴个人防护装备时为113次/分钟,佩戴时为109次/分钟)、深度(不佩戴时为61毫米,佩戴时为62毫米)、正确手部位置(不佩戴时为81%,佩戴时为78%)和完全胸廓回弹(不佩戴时为94%,佩戴时为84%)均未发现显著差异。然而,尽管不显著,但使用个人防护装备时在手部位置和胸廓回弹方面出现了更多负向离群值。
个人防护装备会使SIM - TLX的两个子量表(任务复杂性和感知压力)的值增加,但在心肺复苏模拟中对胸外按压质量没有显著影响。