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Published in: World Journal of Surgery 8/2021

01-08-2021 | Original Scientific Report

Extremity Tourniquet Training at High Seas

Authors: Carlos Yánez Benítez, Marcelo A. F. Ribeiro Jr., Mansoor Khan, Teófilo Lorente-Aznar, Esther Asensio, José Antonio López, Isabel Martínez, Juan L. Blas, Antonio Güemes

Published in: World Journal of Surgery | Issue 8/2021

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Abstract

Background

Future navy officers require unique training for emergency medical response in the isolated maritime environment. The authors issued a workshop on extremity bleeding control, using four different commercial extremity tourniquets onboard a training sail ship. The purposes were to assess participants' perceptions of this educational experience and evaluate self-application simplicity while navigating on high seas.

Methods

A descriptive observational study was conducted as part of a workshop issued to volunteer training officers. A post-workshop survey collected their perceptions about the workshops' content usefulness and adequacy, tourniquet safety, self-application simplicity, and device preference. Tourniquet preference was measured by frequency count while the rest of the studied variables on a one-to-ten Likert scale. Frequencies and percentages were calculated for the studied variables, and application simplicity means compared using the ANOVA test (p < 0.05).

Results

Fifty-one Spanish training naval officers, aged 20 or 21, perceived high sea workshop content’s usefulness, adequacy, and safety level at 8.6/10, 8.7/10, and 7.5/10, respectively. As for application simplicity, CAT and SAM-XT were rated equally with a mean of 8.5, followed by SWAT (7.9) and RATS (6.9), this one statistically different from the rest (p < 0.01). Windlass types were preferred by 94%.

Conclusions

The training sail ship’s extremity bleeding control workshop was perceived as useful and its content adequate by the participating midshipmen. Windlass types were regarded as easier to apply than elastic counterparts. They were also preferred by nine out of every ten participants.
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Metadata
Title
Extremity Tourniquet Training at High Seas
Authors
Carlos Yánez Benítez
Marcelo A. F. Ribeiro Jr.
Mansoor Khan
Teófilo Lorente-Aznar
Esther Asensio
José Antonio López
Isabel Martínez
Juan L. Blas
Antonio Güemes
Publication date
01-08-2021
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
World Journal of Surgery / Issue 8/2021
Print ISSN: 0364-2313
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2323
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00268-021-06149-6

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