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Battlefield Trauma Training: A Pilot Study Comparing the Effects of Live Tissue vs. High-Fidelity Patient Simulator on Stress, Cognitive Function, and Performance

Within the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), the Tactical Medicine (TACMED) course is used to train medical technicians (i.e., medics) in battlefield trauma care. Although training is administered using both simulators (SIM) and live tissue (LT), little is known about their relative effects on stress and...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Military psychology 2017-07, Vol.29 (4), p.345-354
Main Authors: Vartanian, Oshin, Tenn, Catherine, Sullivan-Kwantes, Wendy, Blackler, Kristen, Smith, Ingrid, Peng, Henry, Jarmasz, Jerzy, Caddy, Norleen, Blais, Ann-Renee, Pannell, Dylan, Bouak, Fethi, Saunders, Doug, Tien, Homer C
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Within the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), the Tactical Medicine (TACMED) course is used to train medical technicians (i.e., medics) in battlefield trauma care. Although training is administered using both simulators (SIM) and live tissue (LT), little is known about their relative effects on stress and cognitive function in this context. To address this shortcoming, we conducted a pilot study and collected self-report (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory [STAI]) and biological measures of stress (salivary cortisol and dehydroepiandrosterone [DHEA]), as well as working memory (WM) and short-term memory (STM) data from medics (N = 20) assigned randomly to training and skill assessment using either SIM or LT. Skill assessment resulted in the elevation of STAI scores and salivary cortisol and DHEA levels. WM and STM performance were better at the time of skill assessment, and WM performance exhibited a positive correlation with salivary cortisol level. Salivary cortisol and DHEA levels, STAI scores, and memory performance did not predict pass/fail rates on combat casualty care skills. Although the TACMED course was associated with elevated stress and improved memory performance, those effects were not affected by the training modality. We end by discussing lessons learned from our pilot study and highlight outstanding questions that remain to be addressed in future studies on this topic. What is the public significance of this article? In the Canadian context, both simulator and live-tissue modalities are used to train medics in the treatment of preventable causes of death on the battlefield. Our results demonstrated that there was a positive correlation between stress and cognitive function during training. However, the choice of modality was not associated with different levels of stress or cognitive function in trainees.
ISSN:0899-5605
1532-7876
DOI:10.1037/mil0000159