Volume 23 Issue 2

Page 88

Original Research

Educating and Empowering Inner-City High School Students in Bleeding Control Millicent Okereke, MD Jessica Zerzan, MD Elizabeth Fruchter, MD Valerie Pallos, MD Maya Seegers, MD Mehr Quereshi, MD Lynn Model, MD Monique Jenkins, PhD, BC-FNP Gia Ramsey Christine Rizkalla, MD

Maimonides Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Brooklyn, New York

Section Editor: Pierre Borczuk, MD Submission history: Submitted March 24, 2021; Revision received November 16, 2021; Accepted December 6, 2021 Electronically published February 14, 2022 Full text available through open access at http://escholarship.org/uc/uciem_westjem DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2021.12.52581

Introduction: Unintentional bleeding is the leading cause of death in people 1-44 years of age in the United States. The Stop the Bleed (STB) campaign is a nationwide course that teaches the public to ensure their own safety, call 911, find the bleeding injury, and achieve temporary hemorrhage control by several techniques. Although the national campaign for the training course was inspired by active shooter events, the training can be applied to motor vehicle accidents and small-scale penetrating and gunshot wounds. Extending the audience to inner-city high school students in a violence-prone neighborhood has the potential to save lives if they are first on the scene. Objectives: We hypothesized that students would have a greater degree of comfort, willingness, and preparedness to intervene in acute bleeding after taking the course. Methods: This was a prospective, interventional pilot study in one inner-city high school in Brooklyn, New York. Students were given the option to participate in the STB course with pre- and postsurveys. We recruited 286 students from physical education or health education class to take a 50-minute bleeding control training course. Mean age was 15.7 years old. Students were divided into groups of 20-25 and taught by 2-3 emergency medicine, pediatric, or trauma surgery STB instructors. Each course included 2-3 skills stations for placing a tourniquet, wound packing, and pressure control. Results: Prior to the course, only 43.8% of the students reported being somewhat likely or very likely to help an injured person who was bleeding. After the course, this increased to 80.8% of students even if no bleeding control kit was available. Additionally, there were significant improvements in selfrated comfort level from pre- to post-course 45.4% to 76.5%, and in self-rated preparedness from 25.1% to 83.8%. All three measures showed statistically significant improvement, P <.0001. Conclusion: Teaching the STB course to high school students from a community with high levels of violence resulted in increased comfort level, willingness, and preparedness to act to control bleeding. If these opinions translate into action, students’ willingness to act could decrease pre-hospital blood loss and empower youth to perform life-saving interventions. [West J Emerg Med. 2022;23(2)186–191.]

Western Journal of Emergency Medicine

186

Volume 23, no. 2: March 2022


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Articles inside

Novel Technique for Open Surgical Tracheostomy in Small Children

9min
pages 137-139

Dispatcher Self-assessment and Attitude Toward VideoAssistance as a New Tool in Simulated

18min
pages 131-136

Up in Flames: The Safety of Electrocautery Trephination of Subungual Hematomas withAcrylic Nails

9min
pages 85-87

Prehospital Translation of Chest Pain Tools (RESCUE Study): Completion Rate and Inter-rater Reliability

23min
pages 124-130

Training Leaders in Trauma Resuscitation: Teacher and Learner Perspectives on Ideal Methods

27min
pages 94-101

Educating and Empowering Inner-City High School Students in Bleeding Control

20min
pages 88-93

Incidence of Emergency Department Visits for Electric Rental Scooters Using Detailed Ridership Data

26min
pages 76-84

Comorbid Patterns in the Homeless Population: A Theoretical Model to Enhance Patient Care

34min
pages 102-112

Substance Use-related Emergency Department Visits and Resource Utilization

25min
pages 68-75

Association of Blood Alcohol and Alcohol Use Disorders with Emergency Department Disposition of Trauma Patients

24min
pages 60-67

Community Hospital Response to COVID-19 Outbreak

15min
pages 31-35

Association of SuicideAttempt with Stimulant Abuse in California Emergency Departments in 2011: A Study of 10 Million ED Visits

16min
pages 54-59

Association of Emergency Department Payer Mix with ED Receipt of Telehealth Services: An Observational Analysis

12min
pages 43-46

Untapped Potential for Emergency Department Observation Unit Use: A National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) Study

19min
pages 36-42

Clinician Absences and Contributing Factors During a COVID-19 Surge: PotentialAreas for Intervention and Planning

14min
pages 26-30

Early Rooming Triage: Accuracy and Demographic Factors Associated with Clinical Acuity

22min
pages 47-53

Cloud-Based Influenza Surveillance System in Emergency Departments Using Molecular Based Testing: Advances and Challenges

26min
pages 17-25

Hepatitis C Virus Reflex Testing Protocol in an Emergency Department

24min
pages 10-16
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