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The improvement and retention of skills in shoulder dystocia management with the use of high-fidelity simulation: The SAFE (SimulAtion high-FidElity) study

Shoulder dystocia is a relatively uncommon but serious childbirth-related emergency. To explore the improvement and retention of skills in shoulder dystocia management through high-fidelity simulation training. The SAFE (SimulAtion high-FidElity) study was a prospective cohort study that utilised a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Women and birth : journal of the Australian College of Midwives 2024-05, Vol.37 (3), p.101590-101590, Article 101590
Main Authors: Papoutsis, Dimitrios, Klazoglou, Paraskevi, Valasoulis, George, Tzavara, Chara
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Shoulder dystocia is a relatively uncommon but serious childbirth-related emergency. To explore the improvement and retention of skills in shoulder dystocia management through high-fidelity simulation training. The SAFE (SimulAtion high-FidElity) study was a prospective cohort study that utilised a high-fidelity birth simulator. Registered midwives and final year midwifery students were invited to participate in a one-day workshop at 6-monthly intervals. There was a 30-minute initial assessment, a 30-minute theoretical and hands-on training, and a 30-minute post-training assessment on shoulder dystocia management. Pre-training and post-training values for the predetermined outcomes were compared. In each workshop we assessed the proportion of successful simulated births, the performance of manoeuvres to manage shoulder dystocia, the head-to-body birth time, the fetal head traction force, the quality of communication, the perception of time-to-birth, and the self-reported confidence levels. The baseline workshop recruited 101 participants that demonstrated a significant increase in the proportion of successful simulated births (8.9% vs 93.1%), and a two-fold to three-fold increase in the score of manoeuvres, communication, and confidence after training. Those with low pre-training levels of competency and confidence improved the most post-training at baseline. There was a retention of manoeuvres, communication skills and confidence at 6 months. There was no reduction in fetal head traction force over time. Those being proficient before initial training retained and performed best at the 6-month follow-up. The SAFE study found a significant improvement in skills and confidence after the initial high-fidelity simulation training that were retained after 6 months.
ISSN:1871-5192
1878-1799
DOI:10.1016/j.wombi.2024.02.006