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

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

MedEdPORTAL

Assistant Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School; Medical Director, Emergency Medical Services, University Hospital.

Published: March 2021

Introduction: Emergency medicine (EM) physicians serve at the frontline of disasters in our communities. The 2016 Model of Clinical Practice according to the American Board of EM identifies disaster management as an integral task of EM physicians. We described a low-cost and feasible tabletop exercise to implement such training for EM residents.

Methods: The exercise took place during 2 hours of resident didactic time. A lecture introduced the incident command system (ICS) and triage concepts, followed by a tabletop scenario with a map of a disaster scene or emergency department. Facilitators presented situational prompts of tasks for residents to address during the exercise. These exposed residents to challenges in disaster scenarios, such as surge and limited resources. The exercise concluded with a debrief and short lecture reviewing scenario-specific topics and challenges. Residents completed an online pre- and postexercise assessment, evaluating knowledge and perceptions of disaster scenario management.

Results: Eighteen residents participated in this exercise. The response rates to the pre- and postsurvey were 76% and 72% respectively. Using a Mann Whitney U test, no statistically significant difference was demonstrated on the medical knowledge component of the survey. There was, however, a statistically significant increase in perceived confidence of the residents' ability to manage disaster incidents.

Discussion: We developed a simple exercise that is an easily adaptable and practical option for introduction to disaster preparedness training. These concepts are difficult to teach and assess among learners, however it remains an important component of education for EM physicians-in-training.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7970644PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11119DOI Listing

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