Curriculum and assessment tool for less invasive surfactant administration: an international Delphi consensus study

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  • Niklas Breindahl
  • xgz472, xgz472
  • Tine B. Henriksen
  • Charles C. Roehr
  • Tomasz Szczapa
  • Luigi Gagliardi
  • Maximo Vento
  • Ragnhild Støen
  • Kajsa Bohlin
  • Anton H. van Kaam
  • Daniel Klotz
  • Xavier Durrmeyer
  • Tongyan Han
  • Anup C. Katheria
  • Peter A. Dargaville
  • Aunsholt, Lise

Background: Training and assessment of operator competence for the less invasive surfactant administration (LISA) procedure vary. This study aimed to obtain international expert consensus on LISA training (LISA curriculum (LISA-CUR)) and assessment (LISA assessment tool (LISA-AT)). Methods: From February to July 2022, an international three-round Delphi process gathered opinions from LISA experts (researchers, curriculum developers, and clinical educators) on a list of items to be included in a LISA-CUR and LISA-AT (Round 1). The experts rated the importance of each item (Round 2). Items supported by more than 80% consensus were included. All experts were asked to approve or reject the final LISA-CUR and LISA-AT (Round 3). Results: A total of 153 experts from 14 countries participated in Round 1, and the response rate for Rounds 2 and 3 was >80%. Round 1 identified 44 items for LISA-CUR and 22 for LISA-AT. Round 2 excluded 15 items for the LISA-CUR and 7 items for the LISA-AT. Round 3 resulted in a strong consensus (99–100%) for the final 29 items for the LISA-CUR and 15 items for the LISA-AT. Conclusions: This Delphi process established an international consensus on a training curriculum and content evidence for the assessment of LISA competence. Impact: This international consensus-based expert statement provides content on a curriculum for the less invasive surfactant administration procedure (LISA-CUR) that may be partnered with existing evidence-based strategies to optimize and standardize LISA training in the future.This international consensus-based expert statement also provides content on an assessment tool for the LISA procedure (LISA-AT) that can help to evaluate competence in LISA operators. The proposed LISA-AT enables standardized, continuous feedback and assessment until achieving proficiency.

Original languageEnglish
JournalPediatric Research
Volume94
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)1216-1224
Number of pages9
ISSN0031-3998
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

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