Literature DB >> 27040319

Disaster Medicine: A Multi-Modality Curriculum Designed and Implemented for Emergency Medicine Residents.

Jessica Ngo1, Kimberly Schertzer1, Phillip Harter1, Rebecca Smith-Coggins1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Few established curricula are available for teaching disaster medicine. We describe a comprehensive, multi-modality approach focused on simulation to teach disaster medicine to emergency medicine residents in a 3-year curriculum.
METHODS: Residents underwent a 3-year disaster medicine curriculum incorporating a variety of venues, personnel, and roles. The curriculum included classroom lectures, tabletop exercises, virtual reality simulation, high-fidelity simulation, hospital disaster drills, and journal club discussion. All aspects were supervised by specialty emergency medicine faculty and followed a structured debriefing. Residents rated the high-fidelity simulations by using a 10-point Likert scale.
RESULTS: Three classes of emergency medicine residents participated in the 3-year training program. Residents found the exercise to be realistic, educational, and relevant to their practice. After participating in the program, residents felt better prepared for future disasters.
CONCLUSIONS: Given the large scope of impact that disasters potentiate, it is understandably difficult to teach these skills effectively. Training programs can utilize this simulation-based curriculum to better prepare the nation's emergency medicine physicians for future disasters. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2016;10:611-614).

Entities:  

Keywords:  curriculum; disaster medicine; emergency medicine; residency training; simulation; virtual reality

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27040319     DOI: 10.1017/dmp.2016.8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Disaster Med Public Health Prep        ISSN: 1935-7893            Impact factor:   1.385


  4 in total

Review 1.  Application of Virtual Reality Technology in Disaster Medicine.

Authors:  Yu-Yu Duan; Jia-Yao Zhang; Mao Xie; Xiao-Bo Feng; Song Xu; Zhe-Wei Ye
Journal:  Curr Med Sci       Date:  2019-10-14

2.  Disaster Preparedness Training for Emergency Medicine Residents Using a Tabletop Exercise.

Authors:  Ariel Sena; Frank Forde; Catherine Yu; Harsh Sule; M Meredith Masters
Journal:  MedEdPORTAL       Date:  2021-03-12

Review 3.  Applications of Virtual and Augmented Reality in Infectious Disease Epidemics with a Focus on the COVID-19 Outbreak.

Authors:  Afsoon Asadzadeh; Taha Samad-Soltani
Journal:  Inform Med Unlocked       Date:  2021-04-27

4.  Knowledge retention and usefulness of simulation exercises for disaster medicine - what do specialty trainees know and think?

Authors:  Laura Cowling; Kylen Swartzberg; Anita Groenewald
Journal:  Afr J Emerg Med       Date:  2021-07-22
  4 in total

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