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Introduction: Air Force Critical Care Air Transport (CCAT) teams are 3-person medical crews (physician [MD], nurse [RN], respiratory therapist [RT]) with supplies to transport critically ill adults as part of the aeromedical evacuation system. During Operation Allies Refuge (OAR), critically ill/injured Afghan children were evacuated by CCAT teams despite a lack of pediatric experience or equipment. This study seeks to understand the lived experience of deployed team members who did or could have transported critically ill children during OAR.
Materials And Methods: Thirty-six eligible participants with known emails were invited to participate in a qualitative thematic analysis study using open-ended semi-structured interviews. Interviews were transcribed, and using reflexive thematic analysis, responses were categorized to assess personal experiences, perceived preparedness, training gaps, and areas of improved training for pediatric enroute critical care.
Results: Seventeen (47%) participants were interviewed (41% MDs, 35% RNs, 24% RTs), with saturation of themes. Participants had a median of 14 years of clinical and 3.5 years of CCAT experience. The following themes emerged from the interviews: Patient Care Challenges, Comfort Level, Suggested Changes, and Perceived Resistance to CCAT Training Changes. The most reported patient care challenges were lack of pediatric equipment (35%) and lack of pediatric experience (35%), which were consistent regardless of clinical role, years of experience, or CCAT experience. Seventy-eight percent of participants lacked previous personal or team experience with pediatric patients. Recommended changes to the current CCAT structure included improving pediatric equipment availability and pediatric equipment training (65%), adding pediatric didactic training (76%), adding pediatric simulations (88%), and improving access to pediatric reference guides (41%). Seventy-one percent of respondents felt there would be little or no resistance in adding pediatric instruction to the current CCAT training.
Conclusions: We found that recently deployed CCAT teams lack exposure to pediatric training and do not feel comfortable providing pediatric critical care, despite a requirement to transport critically ill children as seen in OAR. Pediatric equipment was unavailable to CCAT teams, thus challenging pediatric care. Participants reported patient care challenges and were overall supportive of additional pediatric training, especially in the form of simulations. This study can be used to provide insight into training gaps that can help shape and improve pre-deployment training for enroute critical care teams.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/milmed/usaf427 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Res Protoc
September 2025
Institute of Higher Education and Research in Healthcare, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Background: In pediatric intensive care units, pain, sedation, delirium, and iatrogenic withdrawal syndrome (IWS) must be managed as interrelated conditions. Although clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) exist, new evidence needs to be incorporated, gaps in recommendations addressed, and recommendations adapted to the European context.
Objective: This protocol describes the development of the first patient- and family-informed European guideline for managing pain, sedation, delirium, and IWS by the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care.
JAMA Intern Med
September 2025
Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Importance: Hospitals have reported growing difficulty in discharging patients in a timely manner, often citing bottlenecks in postacute care. Medicare Advantage plans, now the dominant form of Medicare coverage, may contribute to these delays due to administrative and network constraints, yet national evidence is lacking.
Objective: To quantify changes in hospital length of stay for Medicare Advantage vs traditional Medicare beneficiaries.
JAMA Netw Open
September 2025
School of Rehabilitation Science, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Importance: The cost-effectiveness of adding early in-bed cycling to usual physiotherapy among adults receiving mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit (ICU) compared with usual physiotherapy alone is unknown.
Objective: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of in-bed cycling plus usual physiotherapy compared with usual therapy alone in the Critical Care Cycling to Improve Lower Extremity Strength (CYCLE) randomized clinical trial.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This trial-based economic evaluation with a 90-day time horizon compared early cycling plus usual physiotherapy vs usual physiotherapy alone from a societal perspective.
JAMA
September 2025
Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Xiangtan Central Hospital, Xiangtan, China.
Acta Cardiol
September 2025
Department of Cardiology, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, P.R. China.
Uric acid to HDL ratio (UHR) is a new measure of inflammation that has been widely used to study cardiovascular disease relationships. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between uric acid to HDL ratio and hypertension. We found that UHR was positively associated with hypertension prevalence in a nationally representative sample of U.
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