Optimising remote site airway management kit dump using the SCRAM bag—a randomised controlled trial

Abstract Background Emergency airway management may be required at any hospital location. Remote site management is associated with increased airway morbidity and mortality. Poor planning and interrupted workflow are significant contributors. Equipment may be unfamiliar, difficult to locate or inade...

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Main Authors: Barry M. Schyma, Andrew E. Wood, Saranga Sothisrihari, Paul Swinton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-04-01
Series:Perioperative Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13741-020-00140-w
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spelling doaj-8282b898d5f54f0fb417290042ae3e852020-11-25T02:21:56ZengBMCPerioperative Medicine2047-05252020-04-01911610.1186/s13741-020-00140-wOptimising remote site airway management kit dump using the SCRAM bag—a randomised controlled trialBarry M. Schyma0Andrew E. Wood1Saranga Sothisrihari2Paul Swinton3Trauma Anaesthesia Group, Department of Anaesthesia, Royal London HospitalTrauma Anaesthesia Group, Department of Anaesthesia, Royal London HospitalTrauma Anaesthesia Group, Department of Anaesthesia, Royal London HospitalParamedic, ScotSTAR, Scottish Ambulance ServiceAbstract Background Emergency airway management may be required at any hospital location. Remote site management is associated with increased airway morbidity and mortality. Poor planning and interrupted workflow are significant contributors. Equipment may be unfamiliar, difficult to locate or inadequate. The SCRAM (Structured CRitical Airway Management) bag aims to provide a portable, structured and reproducible approach to airway management preparation. We hypothesised that SCRAM bag use reduces equipment preparation time, the rate of error and operator cognitive load. Methods Fifty experienced anaesthetists were randomised into two groups and asked to prepare (kit dump) for and manage a simulated remote site difficult airway scenario. The control group (n = 25) used a standard resuscitation trolley while the experimental group used the SCRAM bag (n = 25). The primary outcome was time taken to kit dump completion (seconds). Secondary outcomes were the number of errors and self-reported difficulty (100 mm visual analogue scale). Results Using the SCRAM bag, a 29% reduction in kit dump time (111.7 ± 29.5 vs 156.7 ± 45.1, p = 0.0001) was noted. Participants using the SCRAM bag reported it to be less challenging to use (18.36 ± 16.4 mm vs 50.64 ± 22.9 mm, p < 0.001), and significantly fewer errors were noted (1 (IQR 1–3) vs 8 (IQR 5–9), p = 0.03) (87.5% reduction in the total number of errors). Conclusion The SCRAM bag facilitates a quicker, less challenging kit dump with significantly fewer errors. We propose that this would reduce delay to airway management, reduce cognitive load and provide an improved capability to manage anticipated and unanticipated airway events.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13741-020-00140-wAirwayHuman factorsKit dumpRemote site
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Barry M. Schyma
Andrew E. Wood
Saranga Sothisrihari
Paul Swinton
spellingShingle Barry M. Schyma
Andrew E. Wood
Saranga Sothisrihari
Paul Swinton
Optimising remote site airway management kit dump using the SCRAM bag—a randomised controlled trial
Perioperative Medicine
Airway
Human factors
Kit dump
Remote site
author_facet Barry M. Schyma
Andrew E. Wood
Saranga Sothisrihari
Paul Swinton
author_sort Barry M. Schyma
title Optimising remote site airway management kit dump using the SCRAM bag—a randomised controlled trial
title_short Optimising remote site airway management kit dump using the SCRAM bag—a randomised controlled trial
title_full Optimising remote site airway management kit dump using the SCRAM bag—a randomised controlled trial
title_fullStr Optimising remote site airway management kit dump using the SCRAM bag—a randomised controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Optimising remote site airway management kit dump using the SCRAM bag—a randomised controlled trial
title_sort optimising remote site airway management kit dump using the scram bag—a randomised controlled trial
publisher BMC
series Perioperative Medicine
issn 2047-0525
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Abstract Background Emergency airway management may be required at any hospital location. Remote site management is associated with increased airway morbidity and mortality. Poor planning and interrupted workflow are significant contributors. Equipment may be unfamiliar, difficult to locate or inadequate. The SCRAM (Structured CRitical Airway Management) bag aims to provide a portable, structured and reproducible approach to airway management preparation. We hypothesised that SCRAM bag use reduces equipment preparation time, the rate of error and operator cognitive load. Methods Fifty experienced anaesthetists were randomised into two groups and asked to prepare (kit dump) for and manage a simulated remote site difficult airway scenario. The control group (n = 25) used a standard resuscitation trolley while the experimental group used the SCRAM bag (n = 25). The primary outcome was time taken to kit dump completion (seconds). Secondary outcomes were the number of errors and self-reported difficulty (100 mm visual analogue scale). Results Using the SCRAM bag, a 29% reduction in kit dump time (111.7 ± 29.5 vs 156.7 ± 45.1, p = 0.0001) was noted. Participants using the SCRAM bag reported it to be less challenging to use (18.36 ± 16.4 mm vs 50.64 ± 22.9 mm, p < 0.001), and significantly fewer errors were noted (1 (IQR 1–3) vs 8 (IQR 5–9), p = 0.03) (87.5% reduction in the total number of errors). Conclusion The SCRAM bag facilitates a quicker, less challenging kit dump with significantly fewer errors. We propose that this would reduce delay to airway management, reduce cognitive load and provide an improved capability to manage anticipated and unanticipated airway events.
topic Airway
Human factors
Kit dump
Remote site
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13741-020-00140-w
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