The objective of the Lowlands Saves Lives trial is to compare the quality of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) between face-to-face versus Lifesaver Virtual Reality smartphone application trained participants using a randomized controlled trial.
In order to optimize survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, basic life support (BLS) training of lay-person volunteers is essential. Face-to-face training has long been considered the standard, but new training-methods have emerged, of which the Lifesaver VR (developed by the UK Resuscitation Council) app seems promising. It is unknown which training method results in the highest quality of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Therefore, we conduct this randomized controlled trial in which subjects will be randomized to either one of the two training methods. Following the training, all participants will undergo CPR-quality testing using certified manikins and blinded assessors. The present study will be conducted during Lowlands Science, a section of the Lowlands music festival exclusively dedicated to science. Lowlands will be held on August 16-18 of 2019 and over 50.000 attendees are expected.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
381
CPR training using the Lifesaver virtual reality application
Short face-to-face CPR training
Radboud University Medical Center
Nijmegen, Gelderland, Netherlands
Chest compression quality
Chest compression quality measured as depth (mm) and rate (compressions/min) measured using CPR manikin
Time frame: During post-training CPR test, performed on the same day as the training
Flow fraction
Percentage of time where compressions are given, measured using CPR manikin
Time frame: During post-training CPR test, performed on the same day as the training
CPR performance score
CPR performance score from BLS-training checklist
Time frame: During post-training CPR test, performed on the same day as the training
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