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Assessment of workload during pediatric trauma resuscitation
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Assessment of workload during pediatric trauma resuscitation

Samantha E Parsons, Elizabeth A Carter, Lauren J Waterhouse, Aleksandra Sarcevic, Karen J O'Connell and Randall S Burd
The journal of trauma and acute care surgery, v 73(5), pp 1267-1272
Nov 2012
PMID: 23117383

Abstract

Nurse's Role Trauma Centers - organization & administration Humans Traumatology - organization & administration Workload Patient Care Team - organization & administration Adult Personnel, Hospital Child Task Performance and Analysis Health Care Surveys Resuscitation Physician's Role
Trauma resuscitations are high-pressure, time-critical events during which health care providers form ad hoc teams to rapidly assess and treat injured patients. Trauma team members experience varying levels of workload during resuscitations resulting from the objective demands of their role-specific tasks, the circumstances surrounding the event, and their individual previous experiences. The goal of this study was to determine factors influencing workload experienced by trauma team members during pediatric trauma resuscitations. Workload was measured using the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Task Load Index (TLX). TLX surveys were administered to four trauma team roles: charge nurse, senior surgical resident (surgical coordinator), emergency medicine physician, and junior surgical resident or nurse practitioner (bedside clinician). A total of 217 surveys were completed. Univariate and multivariate statistical techniques were used to examine the relationship between workload and patient and clinical factors. Bedside clinicians reported the highest total workload score (208.7), followed by emergency medicine physicians (156.3), surgical coordinators (144.1), and charge nurses (129.1). Workload was higher during higher-level activations (235.3), for events involving intubated patients (249.0), and for patients with an Injury Severity Score greater than 15 (230.4) (p, 0.001 for all). When controlling for potential confounders using multiple linear regression, workload was increased during higher level activations (79.0 points higher, p = 0.01) and events without previous notification (38.9 points higher, p = 0.03). Workload also remained significantly higher for the bedside clinician compared with the other three roles (p ≤ 0.005 for all). Workload during pediatric trauma resuscitations differed by team role and was increased for higher-level activations and events without previous notification. This study demonstrates the validity of the TLX as a tool to measure workload in trauma resuscitation. Prognostic study, level II.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Critical Care Medicine
Surgery
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