# Procedural Training in Acute Care: A Prospective Study of Learning Intubation Highlighting a Novel Method

**Authors:** Austin Milton, Rusha Patel, Lurdes Queimado, Price Sonkarley, Edward Kosik, Marvin Williams, Michael Anderson, Alexis Patsias, Michael Clampitt, Rachel Hardy, Nilesh R. Vasan

PMC · DOI: 10.1155/emmi/9940852 · Emergency Medicine International · 2026-01-05

## TL;DR

A study compared different tools for intubation training and found a new laryngoscope improved performance for less experienced users on difficult airways.

## Contribution

A novel laryngoscope design was introduced and shown to reduce intubation times in novice and intermediate users on difficult airway simulations.

## Key findings

- The novel laryngoscope with gum elastic bougie reduced intubation times compared to Macintosh with bougie in novices and intermediates.
- Methods using a bougie were slower than those not using it on difficult airway simulations.
- The Seldinger technique is important for reliable endotracheal intubation in nonideal settings.

## Abstract

The researchers compared average intubation times between four different devices and hypothesized that a novel laryngoscope based on an enhancement of the rigid anterior commissure laryngoscope would produce faster times to intubation compared to a Macintosh blade with a bougie among inexperienced users on the difficult airway simulation.

Participants were stratified into novice, intermediate, and advanced skill levels. Each group first performed intubation on a manikin airway without modifications (“easy” airway)—using each of four devices (novel laryngoscope, Macintosh alone, Macintosh with bougie, and GlideScope) in random order—followed by the same technique on a manikin with modifications to mimic a “difficult” airway. Devices requiring the use of a bougie utilize a Seldinger technique. The primary outcome measure was the time taken to inflate the manikin’s lungs with the bag ventilator.

Ninety‐eight participants were recruited and grouped according to their self‐reported experience level: 41 novices, 39 intermediate, and 18 experts. The novel laryngoscope with gum elastic bougie (GEB) led to quicker intubation times (mean 32.0 s) compared with the Macintosh with GEB (mean 37.5 s) among the novice and intermediate groups on the difficult airway (p < 0.05). The methods that utilized a bougie (Macintosh blade with a GEB and Novel Laryngoscope with GEB) led to slower intubation times than the methods not utilizing a bougie (Macintosh blade and GlideScope).

In summary, the Seldinger technique is an important skill for those who perform endotracheal intubations (ETIs), even infrequently or in nonideal settings. The novel laryngoscope may be a helpful option to attain ETI with the reliability of the Seldinger technique and a consistently short ETI interval.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12767774/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12767774