| Literature DB >> 25939807 |
Alba Ripoll Gallardo1, Ahmadreza Djalali1, Marco Foletti1, Luca Ragazzoni1, Francesco Della Corte1, Olivera Lupescu2, Chris Arculeo3, Gotz von Arnim4, Tom Friedl4, Michael Ashkenazi5, Philipp Fisher5, Boris Hreckovski6, Amir Khorram-Manesh7, Radko Komadina8, Konstanze Lechner9, Marc Stal10, Cristina Patru11, Frederick M Burkle12, Pier Luigi Ingrassia1.
Abstract
Disaster response demands a large workforce covering diverse professional sectors. Throughout this article, we illustrate the results of a systematic review of peer-reviewed studies to identify existing competency sets for disaster management and humanitarian assistance that would serve as guidance for the development of a common disaster curriculum. A systematic review of English-language articles was performed on PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, ERIC, and Cochrane Library. Studies were included if reporting competency domains, abilities, knowledge, skills, or attitudes for professionals involved disaster relief or humanitarian assistance. Exclusion criteria included abstracts, citations, case studies, and studies not dealing with disasters or humanitarian assistance. Thirty-eight papers were analyzed. Target audience was defined in all articles. Five references (13%) reported cross-sectorial competencies. Most of the articles (81.6%) were specific to health care. Eighteen (47%) papers included competencies for at least 2 different disciplines and 18 (47%) for different professional groups. Nursing was the most widely represented cadre. Eighteen papers (47%) defined competency domains and 36 (94%) reported list of competencies. Nineteen articles (50%) adopted consensus-building to define competencies, and 12 (31%) included competencies adapted to different professional responsibility levels. This systematic review revealed that the largest number of papers were mainly focused on the health care sector and presented a lack of agreement on the terminology used for competency-based definition.Keywords: competency-based education; disaster medicine education; humanitarian aid; professionalization
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25939807 DOI: 10.1017/dmp.2015.24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Disaster Med Public Health Prep ISSN: 1935-7893 Impact factor: 1.385