OBJECTIVES: Eighty percent of the 10 million annual deaths in children aged ,5 years in developing countries are estimated to be avoidable, with improvements in education for pediatric emergency management being a key factor. Education must take into account cultural considerations to be effective. Study objectives were: (1) to use simulation to identify factors posing barriers to patient care in limited resource settings (LRS); and (2) to understand how simulations in LRS can affect communication and decision-making processes.METHODS: A qualitative study was conducted at 17 different sites in 12 developing countries in Asia, Latin America, and Africa. Data from observations of 68 in situ simulated pediatric emergencies were coded for thematic analysis. Sixty-two different "key informants" were interviewed regarding perceived benefit of simulations.RESULTS: Coding of observations and interviews yielded common themes: impact of culture on team hierarchy, impact of communication and language barriers on situational awareness, systematic emergency procedures, role delineation, shared cognition and resource awareness through simulation, logistic barriers to patient care, and use of recognition-primed decisionmaking by experienced clinicians. Changes in clinical environments were implemented as a result of simulations.CONCLUSIONS: Ad hoc teams in LRS face challenges in caring safely for patients; these include language and cultural barriers, as well as environmental and resource constraints. Engaging teams in simulations may promote improved communication, identification of systems issues and latent threats to target for remediation. There may be a role for training novices in use of recognition-primed or algorithmic decision-making strategies to improve rapidity and efficiency of decisions in LRS.
WHAT'S KNOWN ON THIS SUBJECT:Previous studies in limited resource settings have demonstrated that multidisciplinary team training in simulated trauma and newborn resuscitations improves team performance and resuscitation knowledge and, in some cases, reduces patient mortality regionally in some developing countries.
WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS:In situ simulation in limited resource settings identified latent threats to effective pediatric patient care and provided a vehicle to develop shared mental models among multicultural and multidisciplinary teams, despite cultural differences in conceptualization of leadership and emergency decision-making.