Plain-English translation of NCT07358741 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
This research study is testing whether a shorter, one-day refresher course teaches emergency life support skills just as well as the traditional two-day course. Healthcare professionals like doctors, nurses, and paramedics will take either the shorter or longer course, and researchers will measure how much they learn and how confident they feel afterward. The goal is to see if we can save time without sacrificing the quality of training that saves lives.
Many healthcare workers need to recertify their emergency skills regularly, but fitting long training courses into busy schedules is challenging. This study exists to find out whether a shorter training option could work just as well, making it easier for healthcare professionals to stay current with their life-saving skills.
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You will be assigned to either the one-day or two-day emergency life support course, both following the same official teaching standards. During or right after your course, you'll complete a written knowledge test, demonstrate practical skills (like CPR), and answer questions about your confidence and satisfaction. The researchers will score your performance and compare the results between the two course lengths to see which approach works best.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 1, 2026 · Not medical advice
Egypt
National Hepatology & Tropical Medicine Research Institute
Enrollment target
~158 participants
Started
December 2025
Primary completion
June 2026
Age range
18 Years and older
Last updated on clinicaltrials.gov in January 2026.
Reach out to the team running this trial. Response times vary — some teams are faster than others.
Central contact
Eman Ibrahim El-Desoki Mahmoud, MD, intensive care medicine
National Hepatology & Tropical Medicine Research Institute
Tell us you're interested and we'll help connect you with the research team. We'll walk you through what to expect first — no email needed to get started.