TY - JOUR
T1 - Relationship between psychological characteristics, personality traits, and training on performance in a neonatal resuscitation scenario
T2 - A machine learning based analysis
AU - Giordano, Vito
AU - Bibl, K.
AU - Felnhofer, A.
AU - Kothgassner, O.
AU - Steinbauer, P.
AU - Eibensteiner, F.
AU - Gröpel, P.
AU - Scharnowski, F.
AU - Wagner, M.
AU - Berger, A.
AU - Olischar, M.
AU - Steyrl, D.
N1 - Funding Information:
We are very thankful to all the tutors and educators from the obligatory PBLS course at the MUV. Furthermore, we would like to thank Prof. Salzer-Muhar and Dr. Emilia Lang for their support in organizing the study. Additionally, we would like to appreciate the help of Maria Tulban and Katja Peganc for helping in collecting data and preparing the manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
2022 Giordano, Bibl, Felnhofer, Kothgassner, Steinbauer, Eibensteiner, Gröpel, Scharnowski, Wagner, Berger, Olischar and Steyrl.
PY - 2022/11/18
Y1 - 2022/11/18
N2 - Background: In life-threatening emergency events, prompt decision-making and accurate reactions are essential for saving a human's life. Some of these skills can be improved by regular simulation trainings. However, besides these factors, individual characteristics may play a significant role in the patients' outcome after a resuscitation event. This study aimed to differentiate personality characteristics of team members who take responsibility for their actions, contextualizing the effect of training on resuscitation performance. Methods: Six hundred and two third-year medical students were asked to answer psychological and personality questionnaires. Fifty-five of them performed in a neonatal simulation resuscitation scenario. To assess participants' performances in the NLS scenario, we used a scenario-based designed NLS checklist. A machine learning design was utilized to better understand the interaction of psychological characteristics and training. The first model aimed to understand how to differentiate between people who take responsibility for their actions vs. those who do not. In a second model, the goal was to understand the relevance of training by contextualizing the effect of training to other important psychological and personality characteristics like locus of control, anxiety, emotion regulation, openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. Results: No statistically significant differences were found for psychological characteristics between the training group and the no training group. However, as expected, differences were noted in favor of the training group for performance and within gender for psychological characteristics. When correcting for all these information in a model, anxiety and gender were the most important factors associated with taking responsibility for an action, while training was the only relevant factor in explaining performance during a neonatal resuscitation scenario. Conclusion: Training had a significantly stronger effect on performance in medical students in a neonatal resuscitation scenario than individual characteristics such as demographics, personality, and trait anxiety.
AB - Background: In life-threatening emergency events, prompt decision-making and accurate reactions are essential for saving a human's life. Some of these skills can be improved by regular simulation trainings. However, besides these factors, individual characteristics may play a significant role in the patients' outcome after a resuscitation event. This study aimed to differentiate personality characteristics of team members who take responsibility for their actions, contextualizing the effect of training on resuscitation performance. Methods: Six hundred and two third-year medical students were asked to answer psychological and personality questionnaires. Fifty-five of them performed in a neonatal simulation resuscitation scenario. To assess participants' performances in the NLS scenario, we used a scenario-based designed NLS checklist. A machine learning design was utilized to better understand the interaction of psychological characteristics and training. The first model aimed to understand how to differentiate between people who take responsibility for their actions vs. those who do not. In a second model, the goal was to understand the relevance of training by contextualizing the effect of training to other important psychological and personality characteristics like locus of control, anxiety, emotion regulation, openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. Results: No statistically significant differences were found for psychological characteristics between the training group and the no training group. However, as expected, differences were noted in favor of the training group for performance and within gender for psychological characteristics. When correcting for all these information in a model, anxiety and gender were the most important factors associated with taking responsibility for an action, while training was the only relevant factor in explaining performance during a neonatal resuscitation scenario. Conclusion: Training had a significantly stronger effect on performance in medical students in a neonatal resuscitation scenario than individual characteristics such as demographics, personality, and trait anxiety.
KW - psychological traits
KW - resuscitation
KW - simulation
KW - stress
KW - training
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85143323666&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3389/fped.2022.1000544
DO - 10.3389/fped.2022.1000544
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85143323666
SN - 2296-2360
VL - 10
JO - Frontiers in Pediatrics
JF - Frontiers in Pediatrics
M1 - 1000544
ER -