2010_Disaster_Medicine_for_EM_Residents
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Transcript 2010_Disaster_Medicine_for_EM_Residents
Disaster Medicine for
Emergency Medicine
Residents
Jonathan L. Burstein, MD
Member, ACEP Disaster Preparedness
and Response Committee
Haiti 2010
Disaster Training Proposals
► AAP
► ACS
► AAFP
► AMA
NDLS program
► A”B”PS
Disaster “Boards”
Outside World
► Looking
for medical experts
Hospital admin
EMS
Public safety
Government
► “First
impressions and all that”
Emergency Medicine and Disaster
Medicine
► Natural
role
Patient triage and treatment
Hospital-based
EMS involvement
► Natural
expertise
We see everyone
We see everything
We look for things that aren’t there
► Perhaps
an unnatural interest
DM in the Core Curriculum
► Already
included
MCI
EMS
ID/pandemic/BT
Hospital preparedness/admin
Tox/chemical
Crush/compartment
Rad
► Not
necessarily conjoint
► Not necessarily called out as DM
DM in the Core Curriculum
► We
ARE training residents as experts
► They just may not realize it
► And the materials may not be
Coordinated
Updated
Interesting
DM Uses for Residents
► Reinforces
their sense of mastery
► Reminds them they have a role
Patient care
Hospital response
Outside world (govt., military, NGO)
► Sparks
interest in DM academics
Fellowship training and research
A junior faculty “niche” to develop
ACEP Disaster Committee
“Objective #3”
Review and further define core
curriculum in disaster medicine for
emergency medicine residents and
► Develop/identify training materials for
use by residency programs.
►
►
Formalizing the core that exists
Who Were We?
► ACEP
and ACOEP
A program director
Two fellowship director
A core faculty member
An affiliate faculty member
A resident
► Committee
and ACEP/ACOEP BoD review
Principles for Curriculum
► Based
on review of existing material
Eric Noji’s proposal of 1990
Textbooks
Courses
Fellowships
► 12 hours of material
1 grand rounds/major sesssion per year (4
hours)
3 year residency training program
Resident Curriculum
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
Challenges in Response to Disasters
1 hour
Management of the Medical Response
1 hour
Key Operational Capabilities
3 hours
Special Needs Populations
1 hour
Critical Medical Knowledge
5 hours
Table Top Exercise
1 hour
Resident Curriculum
I. Common Challenges in Response to
Disasters
Common problems encountered during
disasters
►Failure of communication systems
►Patient convergence
Importance of drills
Ethics and Legal Aspects
►Changes in ability to meet the standard of
care
Resident Curriculum
II. Management of the Medical Response
Incident management systems (NIMS, ICS)
►How physicians work with system for overall
response
The role of public health
►Mass dispensing of vaccines, medications
Medical facility planning
Resident Curriculum
III. Key Operational Capabilities
►
Pre-hospital operations
Surge capacity planning
►
►
Disaster triage
HAZMAT/PPE/decontamination
Staff/stuff/structure
Medical system resilience (DMAT/USAR/SNS)
Forensic issues
Resident Curriculum
IV.
Special Needs Populations
Identify vulnerable populations
► Elderly,
pediatric, compromised, disabled, non-English-speaking
Unique medical issues related to these individuals
►Medications/equipment/transfer agreements
Evacuation of congregate facilities (nursing homes, etc)
Social issues
►Family reunification/pets/sheltering
Resident Curriculum
V.
► Mass
Critical Medical Knowledge
trauma
► Structural collapse
► Burns
► Chemical exposure
Nerve agents
► Radiation
► Infectious
disease
Bioterrorism
Pandemic
influenza
► Blast injury
Resident Curriculum
VI. Table Top Exercise
Mass casualty triage exercise
Activation and implementation of incident
management system
E.g. multiple casualties resulting from a
terrorist bombing
E.g. nursing home evacuation to the hospital
Thank You
Questions?