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World Journal of Emergency Medicine ›› 2017, Vol. 8 ›› Issue (4): 245-252.doi: 10.5847/wjem.j.1920-8642.2017.04.001

• Review Articles •     Next Articles

Education in cardiopulmonary resuscitation in Russia: A systematic review of the available evidence

Alexei Birkun(), Maksim Glotov   

  1. Department of Anaesthesiology, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine, Medical Academy named after S. I. Georgievsky of V. I. Vernadsky Crimean Federal University, Simferopol 295051, Russian Federation
  • Received:2017-04-26 Accepted:2017-08-17 Online:2017-12-15 Published:2017-12-15
  • Contact: Alexei Birkun E-mail:birkunalexei@gmail.com

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: To summarise and appraise cumulative published scientific evidence relevant to cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) education in Russia.

DATA RESOURCES: We searched Medline, Scopus, Science Direct and Russian Science Citation Index databases from December 1991 to December 2016 to identify studies pertaining to the field of CPR education that were carried out by Russian researchers and/or investigated the topic of interest for Russia/Russian population. Reference lists of eligible publications, contents pages of relevant Russian journals and Google Scholar were also searched. There was no limitation based on publication language or study design.

RESULTS: Of 7 964 unique citations identified, 22 studies were included. All studies were published from 2009 to 2016, mainly in Russian. Only three studies were reported to be randomized controlled. Non-medical individuals constituted 17% of studied populations. Most of the studies aimed to assess effects of CPR educational interventions, generally suggesting positive influence of the training conducted. The studies were highly heterogeneous as for methodological approaches, structure and duration of educational interventions, evaluation methods and criteria being used. Methodological quality was generally poor, with >40% publications not passing quality screening and only 2 studies meeting the criteria of moderate high quality.

CONCLUSION: The results suggest paucity, low population coverage, high thematic and methodological heterogeneity and low quality of the studies addressing CPR education, which were carried out in the Russian Federation. There is a critical need in conducting methodologically consistent, large-scale, randomized, controlled studies evaluating and comparing efficiency of educational interventions for teaching CPR in different population categories of Russia.

Key words: Cardiac arrest, Cardiopulmonary resuscitation, Education, Training, Russia