Greetings Heidi. I was reviewing the literature specific to team training earlier this year. The most informative papers (from two studies) are listed below.
Mitchell, O., Motschwiller, C. W., Horowitz, J. M., Evans, L. E., & Mukherjee, V. (2019). Characterising variation in composition and activation criteria of rapid response and cardiac arrest teams: A survey of Medicare participating hospitals in five American states. BMJ Open, 9(3), e024548. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-024548
Mitchell, O., Motschwiller, C. W., Horowitz, J. M., Friedman, O. A., Nichol, G., Evans, L. E., & Mukherjee, V. (2019). Rapid response and cardiac arrest teams: A descriptive analysis of 103 American hospitals. Critical Care Explorations, 1(8), e0031. https://doi.org/10.1097/CCE.0000000000000031
Lauridsen, K. G., Schmidt, A. S., Adelborg, K., & Løfgren, B. (2015). Organisation of in-hospital cardiac arrest teams - a nationwide study. Resuscitation, 89, 123–128. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2015.01.014
Overall survival was 26%. Survival in patients with cardiac arrests was 11.13%. Factors such as age, presenting rhythm, and duration of CPR were found to have a significant effect on survival. Problems encountered were personnel and equipment related.