The Perceptions of Emergency Medicine Physicians and Trainees Regarding Family Presence During Adult Patient Resuscitation in South African Public Sector Emergency Centres

Introduction The benefits of family presence during adult resuscitation (FPDR) are well documented in the literature. However, despite apparent value, FPDR is not always practised. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the perceptions of Emergency Medicine physicians and specialist trainees re...

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Main Author: McAlpine, Nicola Anita
Other Authors: Rajbaran, Joshna
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Health Sciences 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31098
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-310982020-07-22T05:07:35Z The Perceptions of Emergency Medicine Physicians and Trainees Regarding Family Presence During Adult Patient Resuscitation in South African Public Sector Emergency Centres McAlpine, Nicola Anita Rajbaran, Joshna Geduld, Heike Emergency Medicine Introduction The benefits of family presence during adult resuscitation (FPDR) are well documented in the literature. However, despite apparent value, FPDR is not always practised. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the perceptions of Emergency Medicine physicians and specialist trainees regarding FPDR in South African public sector Emergency Centres. Method A descriptive study was undertaken, using an electronic survey which consisted of both open and closed-end questions. The Survey was distributed via email to 157 Emergency Medicine physicians and specialist trainees in South Africa. The data was collected and subjected to descriptive statistical analysis. Results Most South African Emergency Medicine physicians and trainees did not feel that FPDR interrupted patient care; did not feel it hindered the teams’ productivity; and did not believe it increases complaints about the quality of patient care. Despite this, practice of FPDR was found to be uncommon. Knowledge regarding FPDR guidelines was poor. Discussion The views of South African Emergency Medicine physicians and specialist trainees regarding FPDR is in keeping with other pro-FPDR countries. However, these views do not seem to translate into practice. FPDR education and development of local guidelines are recommended. 2020-02-13T10:45:27Z 2020-02-13T10:45:27Z 2018 2020-02-12T10:32:18Z Masters Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31098 eng application/pdf Faculty of Health Sciences Division of Emergency Medicine
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Emergency Medicine
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
McAlpine, Nicola Anita
The Perceptions of Emergency Medicine Physicians and Trainees Regarding Family Presence During Adult Patient Resuscitation in South African Public Sector Emergency Centres
description Introduction The benefits of family presence during adult resuscitation (FPDR) are well documented in the literature. However, despite apparent value, FPDR is not always practised. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the perceptions of Emergency Medicine physicians and specialist trainees regarding FPDR in South African public sector Emergency Centres. Method A descriptive study was undertaken, using an electronic survey which consisted of both open and closed-end questions. The Survey was distributed via email to 157 Emergency Medicine physicians and specialist trainees in South Africa. The data was collected and subjected to descriptive statistical analysis. Results Most South African Emergency Medicine physicians and trainees did not feel that FPDR interrupted patient care; did not feel it hindered the teams’ productivity; and did not believe it increases complaints about the quality of patient care. Despite this, practice of FPDR was found to be uncommon. Knowledge regarding FPDR guidelines was poor. Discussion The views of South African Emergency Medicine physicians and specialist trainees regarding FPDR is in keeping with other pro-FPDR countries. However, these views do not seem to translate into practice. FPDR education and development of local guidelines are recommended.
author2 Rajbaran, Joshna
author_facet Rajbaran, Joshna
McAlpine, Nicola Anita
author McAlpine, Nicola Anita
author_sort McAlpine, Nicola Anita
title The Perceptions of Emergency Medicine Physicians and Trainees Regarding Family Presence During Adult Patient Resuscitation in South African Public Sector Emergency Centres
title_short The Perceptions of Emergency Medicine Physicians and Trainees Regarding Family Presence During Adult Patient Resuscitation in South African Public Sector Emergency Centres
title_full The Perceptions of Emergency Medicine Physicians and Trainees Regarding Family Presence During Adult Patient Resuscitation in South African Public Sector Emergency Centres
title_fullStr The Perceptions of Emergency Medicine Physicians and Trainees Regarding Family Presence During Adult Patient Resuscitation in South African Public Sector Emergency Centres
title_full_unstemmed The Perceptions of Emergency Medicine Physicians and Trainees Regarding Family Presence During Adult Patient Resuscitation in South African Public Sector Emergency Centres
title_sort perceptions of emergency medicine physicians and trainees regarding family presence during adult patient resuscitation in south african public sector emergency centres
publisher Faculty of Health Sciences
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31098
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