| Literature DB >> 26335099 |
Luc J M Mortelmans1, Stef J M Bouman, Menno I Gaakeer, Greet Dieltiens, Kurt Anseeuw, Marc B Sabbe.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medical students have been deployed in victim care of several disasters throughout history. They are corner stones in first-line care in recent pandemic planning. Furthermore, every physician and senior medical student is expected to assist in case of disaster situations, but are they educated to do so? Being one of Europe's densest populated countries with multiple nuclear installations, a large petrochemical industry and also at risk for terrorist attacks, The Netherlands bear some risks for incidents. We evaluated the knowledge on Disaster Medicine in the Dutch medical curriculum. Our hypothesis is that Dutch senior medical students are not prepared at all.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26335099 PMCID: PMC4558995 DOI: 10.1186/s12245-015-0077-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Emerg Med ISSN: 1865-1372
Demographic data of our study population
| Gender | Male | 41 % |
| Female | 59 % | |
| Mean age | 25.54 (20–49) | |
| Study year | 5th | 50 % |
| 6th (last) | 50 % | |
| Future orientation | Family practice | 38 % |
| Occupational/insurance | 2 % | |
| Specialisation | 60 % | |
| Lives within 20 km of nuclear installation | Yes | 2 % |
| No | 69 % | |
| Don’t know | 29 % | |
| Lives within 20 km of chemical installation | Yes | 16 % |
| No | 28 % | |
| Don’t know | 56 % | |
| Any EMS/DM experience | Yes | 7 % |
| No | 93 % | |
| Has some DM knowledge | Yes | 13 % |
| No | 87 % | |
| DM needs to be trained within curriculum | Absolutely | 51 % |
| Useful | 48 % | |
| Useless | 1 % |
Scores in mean (minimum–maximum) of the 0–10 visual analogical scale on self-estimated knowledge and capabilty and willingness to respond in the evaluated disaster situations
| Self-estimated knowledge | Self-estimated capability | Willingness to respond | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nuclear incidents | 1.71/10 (0–8) | 1.47/10 (0–9) | 5.21/10 (0–10) |
| Chemical incidents | 2.28/10 (0–8) | 1.85/10 (0–8) | 5.87/10 (0–10) |
| Biological incidents | 2.28/10 (0–8) | 2.04/10 (0–8) | 6.61/10 (0–10) |
| Outbreak very infectious disease (e.g. N5H1) | 4.27/10 (0–10) | 3.92/10 (0–9) | 7.54/10 (0–10) |
| Outbreak very dangerous contagious infection (e.g. Ebola) | 2.88/10 (0–10) | 2.47/10 (0–9) | 4.31/10 (0–10) |
Overview of the answers on the theory/case mix questions
| Q1/ Chain collision, possible cotaminated patients: | |
| Isolate in distal corner | 5 % |
| In waiting room | 49 % |
| In garage | 1 % |
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| No action, hide | 0 % |
| Q2/ Iodine tablets protect against: | |
| External radiation | 28 % |
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| Both external and internal | 24 % |
| No radiation protection | 20 % |
| Don’t know | 13 % |
| Q3/Tthe CGV means: | |
| Operational leader of overall disaster management | 26 % |
| Controlling arriving ambulances | 4 % |
| Field hospital supplies | 2 % |
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| Don’t know | 55 % |
| Q4/ Postman with necrotic lesions: | |
| Frostbite | 10 % |
| New chemical product | 22 % |
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| Use of new kind of black ink | 1 % |
| Don’t know | 20 % |
| Q5/ Chemical decontamination: | |
| Oral antidote | 5 % |
| Antidote body smear | 3 % |
| Antidote spray special miltary cabin | 57 % |
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| Don’t know | 20 % |
| Q6/ What limits radiation damage the most? | |
| Protective clothing | 3 % |
| Fast decontamination | 1 % |
| Oral iodine tablets | 41 % |
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| Don’t know | 1 % |
| Q7/ 2 most important objects to take along in evacuation: | |
| Smartphone | 57 % |
| Laptop | 2 % |
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| Syllabus/handbook | 1 % |
| Sixpack of beer | 4 % |
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| Photo of loved one | 1 % |
| None of the above | 6 % |
| Don’t know | 0 % |
| Q8/ Superficial cuts and first degree burns, go to | |
| Nearest hospital | 47 % |
| Closest hospital with burn unit | 5 % |
| Home (recover and sleep) | 6 % |
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| Don’t know | 1 % |
| Q9/ First step in nuclear decontamination | |
| Shower patient | 8 % |
| Administer iodine tablets | 53 % |
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| Put on lead apron | 4 % |
| Don’t know | 12 % |
| Q10/ Traffic accident with 2 trucks and 2 victims, what to do? | |
| Stop, call 112 and help lying victim | 40 % |
| Stop, call 112 and help limping victim | 2 % |
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| Drive by and call 112 at hospital | 4 % |
| Do as if nothing happened | 0 % |
The correct answers are given in bold. The “don’t know” option was added to eliminate wild guess bias