| JumpSTART Triage
Sanddal,
T.L., Loyacono, T., & Sanddal, N.D. (2004). Effect of JumpSTART
training on immediate and short-term pediatric performance. Journal
of Pediatric Emergency Care, 20(11), 749-753.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to
evaluate the effectiveness of JumpSTART training in changing prehospital
care personnel and/or school nursing personnel performance in triaging
pediatric patients involved in a multiple casualty incident immediately
post-training and at a 3-4 month follow-up interval.
Methods: This research involved a traditional
pre-test, training, post-test, follow-up test format. However, since the
variable of interest was performance, rather than cognition, the measures
were the individual student’s ability to triage ten children with
simulated injures into one of four possible categories within a 5-minute
time window. A convenience sample of participants was selected from 3
divergent geographic locations. Standardized training and performance
evaluation measures were employed.
Results: Significant performance improvements
in pediatric triage were noted immediately following a one-hour lecture,
discussion and case review. Changes in performance were maintained over a
3-month post-training period. Prehospital personnel and school nurses
benefited equally from pediatric triage training.
Conclusions: Structured training results in
triage performance improvement among prehospital and nursing personnel.
This improvement is maintained for a period of at least 3 months.
Additional research pertaining to the length of time between necessary
retraining and/or refresher is warranted. Additionally, the relationship
between staged scenario performance and responses to actual multiple
casualty incidents needs to be established.
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