Improving the medical management of organophosphorus pesticide poisoning through health services research and training
Abstract
Organophosphorus (OP) self-poisoning is a major global public
health problem resulting in over 200,000 deaths each year with a
case fatality of 15-30%. Early medical management consists of
effective resuscitation and targeted antidote therapy.
This thesis argued that health services research and rural doctor
training could be used to improve the medical management of OP
poisoning in a resource limited rural Sri Lankan setting, where
the delivery of critical care is limited by a lack of diagnostic
tests and resuscitation skills. Research investigating the use of
AChE in guiding clinical management, and research that measured
the effectiveness of rural resuscitation training, were the two
streams of research that were the founding pillars of the thesis.
These two elements were linked together through a conceptual
framework of knowledge translation, each operating at different
points in the continuum of evidence being translated into
practice.
An AChE POC test (Test-mate ChE) was demonstrated to provide
accurate and reliable results in acute OP poisoning when compared
with a reference laboratory. A survey based analysis of
clinician’s knowledge, attitudes and practices found that most
doctors valued the test, but also surprisingly found that doctors
who were more experienced with AChE valued the test less. Low
proportions valued the test in guidance of acute poisoning
management (e.g. to direct oxime therapy and early discharge).
A systematic review highlighted a lack of supporting primary
evidence for the use of AChE in relation to oxime use and
discharge decisions. Advice on interpretation of AChE and caution
about pitfalls in measurement were also lacking. These areas need
to be addressed to optimise provision of AChE POC devices.
A train-the-trainer (TTT) model of resuscitation education was
effective in improving resuscitation knowledge and skills in
rural peripheral hospital doctors, and improvements in most
components were sustained for 12 weeks. This demonstrated the
effectiveness of using non-specialist doctors to conduct peer-led
advanced life support (ALS) training in a low resource peripheral
hospital setting, using objective knowledge and skills endpoints
according to standardized metrics.
A systematic review of resuscitation of OP poisoning found no
texts solely focused on acute initial management. An ‘OP
specific’ ALS guideline was proposed based on consistent
literature recommendations highlighting the importance of rapid
atropinisation (doubling dose regimen) to be delivered
simultaneous with immediate airway, breathing and circulation
management. Other antidotes such as oximes should not be in the
ALS guidelines.
A participatory action research approach was used to address
practical problems through close engagement with health services
and local training systems. The experience from both streams of
research showed that such strategies were integral to the
completion of the studies employed in the low resource rural
setting. The thesis demonstrated health services research and
training could be used to close the evidence-practice gap, and
may have a role in the improvement of the medical management of
OP poisoning. Future research should investigate clinical
endpoints associated with the use of AChE in guiding OP poisoning
management, the development of decision rules offering practical
guidance in measurement and interpretation of AChE, the
evaluation of OP specific ALS guidelines, and the sustainability
rural resuscitation training programs.
Description
Keywords
organophosphorus poisoning, organophosphate poisoning, OP poisoning, pesticide poisoning, intentional self-harm, acetylcholinesterase, point of care testing, Testmate ChE, train the trainer, teacher training, resuscitation training, emergency medicine, medical education, toxicology, knowledge translation, participatory action research, mixed methodology, health services research, advanced life support, ALS guideline, rural Sri Lanka
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description