Helping babies breathe: Providing an evidence-based education intervention at a tertiary referral hospital in Liberia
Abstract
Background: Helping Babies Breathe (HBB) is a neonatal resuscitation program that utilizes an active learning pedagogy to increase knowledge and skills for nurses and midwives in resource-limited areas. Two faculty members from the Tubman National Institute of Medical Arts in Liberia became certified as HBB trainers while completing a graduate nurse educator degree in the US. The aim of the current study was to use an academic program requirement for a graduate practicum and research experience to determine the effect of implementing the HBB program on the level of neonatal resuscitation knowledge and skills of students and staff at the John F. Kennedy Medical Center (JFKMC) in Liberia.
Methods: The HBB program was provided to 154 participants from the JFKMC and the co-located Tubman National Institute of Medical Arts for a period of six weeks. Assessment of the participants’ neonatal resuscitation skills and knowledge included pre/post scores on multiple choice questions and evaluation of the bag and mask ventilation skills using an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) approach.
Results: Participants expressed satisfaction with the program and the skills acquired. A paired t test for the multiple choice items indicated significant knowledge difference between the pretest (2.36 ± 2.21) and posttest (15.27 ± 1.24) scores, p = .000. On the skills checklist for OSCE A, all participants achieved final competency rates of 100% on six items, 90%-
99% on two, 70%-79% on one, and <69% on four items; on OSCE B, they achieved final competency rates of 100% on 12 checklist items, 90%-99% on one, 80%-89% on three, 70%-79% on one, and <69% on one item.
Full Text:
PDFDOI: https://doi.org/10.5430/jnep.v4n9p119
Journal of Nursing Education and Practice
ISSN 1925-4040 (Print) ISSN 1925-4059 (Online)
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