摘要

BackgroundThe 2009 influenza A (H1N1) pandemic caused surges of patients in intensive care units (ICUs) in resource-limited settings. Several Ministries of Health requested clinical management guidance from the World Health Organization (WHO), which had not previously developed guidance regarding critically ill patients.
ObjectiveTo assess the acceptability and impact on knowledge of a short course about the management of critically ill patients with acute respiratory infections complicated by sepsis or acute respiratory distress syndrome delivered to clinicians in resource-limited ICUs.
MethodsOver 4years (2009-2013), WHO led the development, piloting, implementation and preliminary evaluation of a 3-day course that emphasized patient management based on evidence-based guidelines and used interactive adult-learner teaching methodology. International content experts (n=35) and instructional designers contributed to development. We assessed participants' satisfaction and content knowledge before and after the course.
ResultsThe course was piloted among clinicians in Trinidad and Tobago (n=29), Indonesia (n=38) and Vietnam (n=86); feedback from these courses contributed to the final version. In 2013, inaugural national courses were delivered in Tajikistan (n=28), Uzbekistan (n=39) and Azerbaijan (n=30). Participants rated the course highly and demonstrated increased immediate content knowledge after (vs before) course completion (P<.001).
ConclusionsWe found that it was feasible to create and deliver a focused critical care short course to clinicians in low- and middle-income countries. Collaboration between WHO, clinical experts, instructional designers, Ministries of Health and local clinician-leaders facilitated course delivery. Future work should assess its impact on longer-term knowledge retention and on processes and outcomes of care.

  • 出版日期2018-9

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