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Education and age affect skill acquisition and retention in lay rescuers after a European Resuscitation Council CPR/AED course
Authors:Konstantina Papalexopoulou  Athanasios Chalkias  Ioannis Dontas  Paraskevi Pliatsika  Charalampos Giannakakos  Panagiotis Papapanagiotou  Afroditi Aggelina  Theodoros Moumouris  Georgios Papadopoulos  Theodoros Xanthos
Affiliation:1. National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Medical School, MSc “Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation”, Athens, Greece;2. University of Ioannina, School of Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Ioannina, Greece
Abstract:

Objectives

To examine whether education and age affect skill acquisition and retention in lay rescuers after a European Resuscitation Council (ERC) CPR/AED course.

Background

Because of the importance of bystander CPR/AED skills in the setting of cardiac arrest, acquisition and retention of resuscitation skills has gained a great amount of interest.

Methods

The ERC CPR/AED course format for written and practical evaluation was used. Eighty lay people were trained and evaluated at the end of the course, as well as at one, three, and six months.

Results

Retention of CPR/AED skills improved over time, recording the lowest practical scores at one month after initial training and the lowest written scores at initial training. In practical evaluation scores, when examined longitudinally, age presented a significant adverse effect and higher background education presented a non-significant positive effect. Moreover, regarding written evaluation scores, when examined longitudinally, education presented a significant positive effect while age did not significantly correlate with written scores.

Conclusions

Education and age affected retention of CPR/AED skills in lay rescuers. Also, our results suggest that the ERC CPR/AED course format may be poorly designed to discriminate between participants with different levels of practical and written resuscitation skills and merit a thorough investigation in future studies.
Keywords:Basic life support   Training   Skill acquisition   Skill retention   Lay rescuers
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