Jurnal Internasional Afrika vol. 13 issue 2 2023
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
An evaluation of basic life support training among medical students in Southwest Nigeria: A web-based study
Dublin Core
Title
Jurnal Internasional Afrika vol. 13 issue 2 2023
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
An evaluation of basic life support training among medical students in Southwest Nigeria: A web-based study
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
An evaluation of basic life support training among medical students in Southwest Nigeria: A web-based study
Subject
Lifesaving skills Medical proficiency Emergency medicine BLS training Medical students
Description
Background: Basic Life Support (BLS) is considered a lifesaving measure and sound knowledge is expected among health professionals. Studies conducted among medical doctors and students in many developing countries show deficiencies in knowledge and practice of essential BLS skills. This study assessed the awareness, knowledge, perception, practice, accessibility and barriers to BLS training amongst medical students in South-Western Nigeria, exposing skill gaps and training challenges to inform appropriate solutions. Methods: This was a cross-sectional descriptive e-survey involving 2 nd –6 th year medical students enrolled in 12 regional medical schools. Overall, 553 responses were received over a 3-month period from November 2020 to January 2021 and analyzed using IBM-SPSS 26. Results: Of the 553 respondents, 79.2% were aware of BLS however only 160 (29%) respondents had good knowledge of BLS principles. Increasing age, higher level of study, prior BLS training and being enrolled in College of Medicine, University of Lagos (CMUL) were significantly associated with a higher knowledge score ( p < 0.05). Majority (99.5%) considered BLS training necessary however, only 51.3% had prior training. Increased level of study correlated with prior BLS training ( p < 0.05) alongside higher BLS uptake by respondents from CMUL (26.7%) and College of Medicine, University of Ibadan (20.9%) compared to respondents from other schools ( p < 0.05). Only 35.4% had ever done Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation. Most respondents reported no confidence in performing BLS (67.1%) or in using an Automated External Defibrillator (85.7%). Unavailability of training opportunities in state (35%), town (42%) and cost (27%) were major barriers to BLS training identified. Conclusion: Despite a high level of awareness of BLS training, knowledge of BLS principles and its practice is poor among Nigerian medical students, reflecting a need to integrate stand-alone/structured BLS trainings into the medical curriculum to increase participation and accessibility by medical students
Creator
Simileoluwa O. Onabanjo
a ,
∗ , Faith O. IBU
a , Adebisi A. Adeyeye
a , Babatunde A. Akodu
b , Oyinoluwa G Adaramola
a , Akinboade O. Popoola
a ,
∗ , Faith O. IBU
a , Adebisi A. Adeyeye
a , Babatunde A. Akodu
b , Oyinoluwa G Adaramola
a , Akinboade O. Popoola
Source
www.elsevier.com/locate/afjem
Date
20 April 2023
Contributor
peri irawan
Format
pdf
Language
english
Type
text
Files
Citation
Simileoluwa O. Onabanjo
a ,
∗ , Faith O. IBU
a , Adebisi A. Adeyeye
a , Babatunde A. Akodu
b , Oyinoluwa G Adaramola
a , Akinboade O. Popoola, “Jurnal Internasional Afrika vol. 13 issue 2 2023
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
An evaluation of basic life support training among medical students in Southwest Nigeria: A web-based study,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed November 21, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2148.
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
An evaluation of basic life support training among medical students in Southwest Nigeria: A web-based study,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed November 21, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2148.