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Kneeling Posture With a Kneeling Stool During Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in Hospital

H

Hanyang University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cardiac Arrest

Treatments

Device: Chest compression with a kneeling stool
Device: Chest compression with a step stool

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02043028
Kneeling Posture
University of Ulsan 2013-0141 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

To perform chest compression (CC) in the kneeling posture in hospital, we designed a stage with stairs, named the 'kneeling stool', on which a CC performer kneels beside a patient on a bed.This work is the validation study to demonstrate that the kneeling stool could be used for high quality hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) with the kneeling posture. We hypothesized that the quality of chest compression with a kneeling posture using the kneeling stool is equal to or superior to CC with a standing posture using the height adjustment mechanism of the bed.

Full description

We designed and implemented the kneeling stool to perform CPR with the kneeling posture for a patient on a bed. The frame is constructed of an aluminum alloy. The size is 570 mm (width) x 598 mm (depth) x 600 mm (height). The weight is 9.3 kg, which is easily moved as needed. For easy rotation between rescuers, a step plate was inserted. To prevent pain to the knees of the kneeling CC performer, a 40mmthick sponge cushion was placed on the top plate and fixed to the frame.

A standard hospital bed frame (Transport stretcher®, 760 x2110 mm, 228 kg, Stryker Co., Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA), a foam mattress (660 x 920 x 80 mm, soft foam with polyurethane coverage, Stryker Co., USA), a backboard (450 ×600 ×10 mm, 3 kg Lifeline Plastic, Sung Shim Medical Co., Bucheon, Korea), and a step stool (395 x 450 x 410 mm, Gunica Co., Gyeongsangnam-do, Korea) were used in the experiment. A Resusci Annie Modular System Skill Reporter® manikin (Laerdal Medical, Orpington, UK) was used to perform CPR in the evaluations. We added weight to the manikin to equal 34 kg for simulating the upper body weight of an adult human as in a previous study.

Data collection The participants were divided into two groups by random drawing. Each performer in the first group knelt on the kneeling stool beside the manikin on a bed and compressed the chest of the manikin (CCs with a kneeling posture, PK).Each performer in the second group stood on a step stool beside the manikin on a bed and compressed the chest of the manikin (CCs with a standing posture, PS). When the performer stood beside the manikin on a bed, the height of the manikin's back was adjusted in height to the knee level of the provider using the step stool and the bed height adjustment mechanism. All the participants performed continuous CCs for 5 minutes without audio-visual feedback. After 2 weeks, the posture used for the CCs by each group was changed. Each participant recorded his/her fatigue and pain levels on a visual analogue scale (VAS, score 0 indicates "no pain and fatigue" and score 10 indicates "unbearable pain and fatigue") for each minute during 5 minutes of CCs. After conclusion of the experiment, the participants selected a preferred CC posture in terms of the safety and the quality of the CCs.

Enrollment

38 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 60 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Doctors and nurses working at emergency department
  • American Heart Association Basic Life Support (AHA BLS) provider certification

Exclusion criteria

  • Heart, wrist, or low back disease or who were pregnant were excluded

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

38 participants in 2 patient groups

Group 1
Experimental group
Description:
Participants compress the chest of a manikin with kneeling posture using a kneeling stool for chest compression posture during 5 minutes 2 weeks later, They perform the chest compression with standing posture using a step stool during 5 minutes
Treatment:
Device: Chest compression with a step stool
Device: Chest compression with a kneeling stool
Group 2
Experimental group
Description:
Participants compress the chest of a manikin with a standing posture using a step stool for chest compression posture during 5 minutes 2 weeks later, They perform the chest compression with a kneeling posture using a kneeling stool stool and bed height adjustment during 5 minutes
Treatment:
Device: Chest compression with a step stool
Device: Chest compression with a kneeling stool

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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