Abstract

As part of the national Stop the Bleed campaign in the United States, more than a million people have received bleeding control training through the work of many organizations. These public and professional educational experiences are ideally grounded in health sciences, clinical, and educational evidence to be most effective. However, there is currently no standard tool for evaluating the educational quality of these programs. We developed and validated the Stop the Bleed Education Assessment Tool (SBEAT) to provide a standard measure of life-threatening bleeding educational programs knowledge learning outcomes to aid in evaluation and development of this public health program.The SBEAT development included medical, clinical, and educational experts to derive and validate learning outcomes. Specific item writing incorporated focus groups for input on language and then pilot testing before a full community pilot test established a data set, for which a Rasch methodology was applied. The resulting tool used 34 items embedded in 19 survey questions, with item separation statistic of 5.56 (0.97 reliability) and person separation statistic of 2.09 (0.81 reliability) for 171 persons. Overall, the Cronbach Alpha (KR-20) person score “test reliability” equaled 0.85 (SEM = 2.24).The SBEAT project establishes a standardized assessment tool to evaluate the cognitive aspects of first aid for life threatening bleeding. Comparison of outcomes from different teaching styles and methods will allow for the development of best practices for future bleeding control education and help organizations demonstrate value to learners, funders, and policy makers, and advance health sciences education. SBEAT offers a measure for which educational efficiency and efficacy can be judged within a larger effort to prepare people for personal emergencies or large-scale disasters.

Highlights

  • Public health, school-based, and community-based health educators work to prevent, respond, and help people recover from personal emergencies and disasters by teaching first aid

  • We developed and validated the Stop the Bleed Education Assessment Tool (SBEAT) to provide a standard measure of life-threatening bleeding educational programs knowledge learning outcomes to aid in evaluation and development of this public health program

  • We developed a series of items for the cognitive and competency domains that were presented for peer review to the Education and First Aid sub-councils of the national Scientific Advisory Council (SAC) of the American Red Cross (n = 18)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

School-based, and community-based health educators work to prevent, respond, and help people recover from personal emergencies and disasters by teaching first aid. Aligning educational outcomes and clinical evidence bases to bleeding control education took shape in 2017, when the National Center for Disaster Medicine and Public Health assembled the Stop the Bleed Education Consortium (SBEC), consisting of an international group of trauma, medical education, and public health experts They put forward, based on analysis of existing programs, educational content and delivery recommendations for STB education programs [13], which may be applied to any LTB curriculum. The SBEC recommended three critical objectives for education programs: increase motivation of learners to act, differentiation of life-threatening from non-life-threatening bleeding, and learning to apply pressure (both direct and via a tourniquet) to stop bleeding [13] While these recommendations have proven helpful for creating courses and vetting STB training programs, currently no validated measures exist to compare learner outcomes between or within various educational programs. In order to compare learner outcomes with objective data, and offer feedback for

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.