Monday, May 28, 2012

Week 2: Biostatistics and a bomb simulation

My week began with a meeting with Dr. Terndrup. We decided to modify our design to make our project a crossover study. This will allow us to not only gather the longitudinal data we need to determine of the method of teaching CPR is effective after a year, but also to verify the results of the Glick et al study done last year. Dr. Terndrup recommended we meet with the biostats department to make sure our design would yield statistically significant results with our sample size. We met with the same statistician who worked on the Glick et al study last summer, and he liked our idea to use the crossover design. He was very helpful, and I am glad we get 4 free hours of biostats consults! 

On Wednesday, Dr. Kass, an emergency room physician, gave us an applied biostats lecture. It was very helpful and explained a lot of complicated statistical terms in ways that we could apply them to our projects. We had another biostats talk on Thursday by the biostats department which began with this youtube video, which was pretty comical:


Because we made changes to our study design, we had to resubmit our project to the Institutional Review Board. Hopefully we will be approved for an exemption early next week.  Because there is 'less than minimal risk' to study participants, we should be exempt from IRB review. 


On Friday I met two med students, a paramedic and a nurse who work for Life Lion, and Nancy who is the nurse who supervises Emergency Department research, at 5:30 AM to go to State College for the day. We used the Lion Reach trailer, which is a 1.5 million dollar trailer which can be a 15 bed mobile hospital or used for educational purposes. We took part in a bomb simulation to see if the emergency personnel in State College were prepared if a bomb were to go off in Beaver Stadium. The simulation was interactive and really put each participant in difficult situations. We had to make decisions to save the most number of lives.

During the afternoon, Dr. Terndrup gave a presentation on septic shock to a group from 
Mount Nittany Medical Center who are developing protocol for treatment of septic shock. The Life Lion paramedic and nurse then gave a presentation a stoke patient they cared for a few months back. Although it was a 12 hour day, it was very enjoyable. 

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Week 1

I began my summer research internship with the Emergency Department at Penn State Hershey Medical Center on Monday, May 14th. I am one of 12 students taking part in the Emergency Department Summer Research Program, but I am the only undergraduate student. Everybody else is a medical student. 

After some introductory meetings during the first few days, I have been assigned to work with a first year medical student on a longitudinal study assessing a new technique of teaching CPR. This technique was developed last year by medical students in the same research program I am in, and their study showed impressive immediate results. The long term benefits, however, are unknown. That's where my project comes in. 

The medical student I am working with, Peter, and I are very efficient with our work. We had our research proposal submitted or Institutional Review Board approval by Wednesday and still haven't heard back about it yet. In the meantime, I have done a lit search on longitudinal chest compression studies and have learned a lot about REDCap, a research database that we will be using for the study. 

Peter and I have taken on an additional project too. We will be developing the REDCap database for a three year airway study being done by the Emergency Department. This study will develop a new training method using two-way audio visual communication between an airway expert (emergency room physician or anesthesiologist) and the person being trained. Individual training videos of the intubation will also be created for further training purposes. 

I'm very happy with my internship, and I've only had seven days of work so far. I'm very appreciative of this experience, and am thankful for Dr. Thomas Terndrup, the chair of the Emergency Department at Penn State Hershey and a 1977 Juniata graduate, for allowing me to have this experience.