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.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftPediatric Research
Vol/bind94
Udgave nummer3
Sider (fra-til)1216-1224
Antal sider9
ISSN0031-3998
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2023

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
This study was supported by Chiesi Denmark, a subsidiary of Chiesi Farmaceutici, Italy. Chiesi did not influence the study design, data collection, analysis, interpretation, writing or decision to submit the manuscript for publication. Open access funding provided by Royal Danish Library.

Funding Information:
The authors would like to acknowledge the help of all 153 experts in this study for completing one or several of the Delphi rounds. Furthermore, we would like to thank the European Society for Pediatric Research (ESPR) for endorsing and promoting this study on social media.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).

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