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Does Watching Skill Videos Affect EMT Psychomotor Pass Rates? 

EMS World Expo 2020

Introduction: EMS education requires laboratory time to ensure students are competent before field rotations. The use of skill videos in the initial healthcare education classroom has been demonstrated to assist clinical skill development, provide visual demonstration, and link classroom learning to skills performance. However, is there a trade-off in competency due to time watching videos and not practicing skills? 

Hypothesis: Time spent watching demonstrational videos in EMT skill labs does not reduce first-time pass rate on the NREMT psychomotor exam. 

Methods: The UCLA hybrid EMT program is 182 hours, with 68 hours spent in laboratory. A retrospective review of oxygen administration and supine spinal immobilization first-time psychomotor pass rates was conducted. Three cohorts of students who did not use the skill videos were compared with two cohorts who watched the skill videos before the start of each of their respective laboratory rotations. The demonstrational videos are between 3 and 8 minutes long and provided online. A t-test (two-sample assuming unequal variances with statistical threshold of 0.05) was performed comparing first-time pass rates of the respective skill with and without videos. This study received IRB approval from the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine. 

Results: In this study 241 and 237 students’ first-time psychomotor pass rates were evaluated without the oxygen administration or supine spinal immobilization skill videos respectively. An additional 145 students’ first-time psychomotor pass rates were evaluated with the skill videos for the two skills. The first-time pass rates for oxygen administration without and with the skill video were 95.2% and 91.8% respectively. The first-time pass rates for supine spinal immobilization without and with the skill video were 82.7% and 82.1% respectively. The p-value for oxygen administration was 0.24 and for supine spinal immobilization was 0.42. 

Conclusion: In these data there was no significant difference in first-time pass rates on the psychomotor exams with or without the skill videos. Showing a short, specific skill video that highlights important ideas can increase learning acquisition and limit time spent lecturing in the laboratory.