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Published in: International Journal of Emergency Medicine 1/2010

Open Access 01-03-2010 | Original Research Article

Medical student disaster medicine education: the development of an educational resource

Authors: Ernst G. Pfenninger, Bernd D. Domres, Wolfgang Stahl, Andreas Bauer, Christine M. Houser, Sabine Himmelseher

Published in: International Journal of Emergency Medicine | Issue 1/2010

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Abstract

Background

Disaster medicine education is an enormous challenge, but indispensable for disaster preparedness.

Aims

We aimed to develop and implement a disaster medicine curriculum for medical student education that can serve as a peer-reviewed, structured educational guide and resource. Additionally, the process of designing, approving and implementing such a curriculum is presented.

Methods

The six-step approach to curriculum development for medical education was used as a formal process instrument. Recognized experts from professional and governmental bodies involved in disaster health care provided input using disaster-related physician training programs, scientific evidence if available, proposals for education by international disaster medicine organizations and their expertise as the basis for content development.

Results

The final course consisted of 14 modules composed of 2-h units. The concepts of disaster medicine, including response, medical assistance, law, command, coordination, communication, and mass casualty management, are introduced. Hospital preparedness plans and experiences from worldwide disaster assistance are reviewed. Life-saving emergency and limited individual treatment under disaster conditions are discussed. Specifics of initial management of explosive, war-related, radiological/nuclear, chemical, and biological incidents emphasizing infectious diseases and terrorist attacks are presented. An evacuation exercise is completed, and a mass casualty triage is simulated in collaboration with local disaster response agencies. Decontamination procedures are demonstrated at a nuclear power plant or the local fire department, and personal decontamination practices are exercised. Mannequin resuscitation is practiced while personal protective equipment is utilized. An interactive review of professional ethics, stress disorders, psychosocial interventions, and quality improvement efforts complete the training.

Conclusions

The curriculum offers medical disaster education in a reasonable time frame, interdisciplinary format, and multi-experiential course. It can serve as a template for basic medical student disaster education. Because of its comprehensive but flexible structure, it should also be helpful for other health-care professional student disaster education programs.
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Metadata
Title
Medical student disaster medicine education: the development of an educational resource
Authors
Ernst G. Pfenninger
Bernd D. Domres
Wolfgang Stahl
Andreas Bauer
Christine M. Houser
Sabine Himmelseher
Publication date
01-03-2010
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
International Journal of Emergency Medicine / Issue 1/2010
Print ISSN: 1865-1372
Electronic ISSN: 1865-1380
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12245-009-0140-9

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