4.7 Article

Epidural Catheterization in Obstetrics: A Checklist-Based Video Assessment of Free Available Video Material

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11061726

Keywords

obstetrics; obstetric pain; pain management; instructional film and video; anesthesia; epidural; education

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This study analyzed videos on YouTube about epidural catheter placement and found that most of the videos were of poor quality and unsuitable for self-study due to serious errors and patient safety issues. The lack of quality control makes it difficult to find suitable videos for educational purposes.
Epidural catheterization has become an indispensable part of modern pain therapy, for example, in obstetrics. Learning how to master this skill is an important competency. Videos are among the information sources with the highest information content for learning such skills. The present study aims to analyze videos regarding epidural catheter placement provided on the YouTube platform based on a validated checklist. An expert workshop selected crucial items for learning epidural catheterization in obstetrics. Items were identified and optimized in a five-step testing process. Using this checklist, videos from YouTube were evaluated by eleven health care professionals. Sixteen videos were identified and analyzed. Concerning the catheterization-specific part of the checklist, only two videos showed satisfactory quality. In the didactic part, eleven out of 21 items reached a mean score >50% of the points. Regarding interrater reliability, the catheterization-specific checklist was shown to be substantial (Fleiss' kappa = 0.610), and the didactic part was shown to be fair (Fleiss' kappa = 0.401). Overall, standard monitoring and appropriate aseptic technique were followed in only 42% and 49% for the procedure. There was a significant correlation between the runtime and the content quality (p < 0.001). No correlation could be found in terms of platform rating parameters. The video quality varied highly in terms of the requirements of this practical skill. The majority appear unsuitable for self-study due to serious errors and deficiencies regarding patient safety. However, there is no quality control on free platforms. Accordingly, it is difficult to identify suitable videos for educational purposes.

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