Training trial of critical care paramedics for non-medical authorisation of blood

重症监护护理人员非医疗授权采血培训试验

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Abstract

The use of pre-hospital blood transfusion by air ambulance crews is increasing. Blood transfusion is traditionally 'authorised' by doctors, not prescribed. However, there is an increasing interest in extending the capability of authorisation to other practitioners - that is, non-medical authorisation (NMA). A UK framework for nurses and midwives has existed since 2007, but training for critical care paramedics (CCPs) has been limited. The Resuscitation with Pre-Hospital Blood Products (RePHILL) trial was launched in 2016, requiring pre-hospital administration of red cells and LyoPlas. Authorisation was initially restricted to doctors, leading to missed recruitment by paramedic-only crews. The trial protocol was amended in 2019 to permit NMA following suitable training and stakeholder consultation. We present a targeted training programme designed to support paramedic-led transfusion within the framework of the pre-hospital trial. We considered the knowledge and skills required for NMA and compared this with baseline knowledge from paramedic training to identify the training gap. We examined examples of existing military and civilian NMA training to develop a targeted programme for a single air ambulance. The four elements of our training programme were pre-course online training, previous trial participation, face-to-face training and competency assessment. Training was delivered to three CCPs, who cascaded the training to 14 colleagues. The training time was one morning, including a face-to-face session and assessment. Novel topics included physiological triggers for transfusion and transfusion risks in the pre-hospital environment. Paramedics were encouraged to recognise and report new patterns of adverse events. Reflective feedback suggests the programme provided CCPs the knowledge to autonomously recruit trial patients and authorise transfusion.

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