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Journal Article

Citation

Verson J, Dyga N, Agbayani N, Serafin F, Hondros L. Int. J. Emerg. Med. 2018; 11(1): e38.

Affiliation

Department of Emergency Medicine, Rush University Medical Center, 1603 W. Congress Pkwy, Chicago, IL, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1186/s12245-018-0195-6

PMID

31179945

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To design and implement a replicable disaster training curriculum for the first on-call medical student hazardous materials response team.

METHODS: Twenty-eight first-year medical students participated in a simulated citywide bioterrorism disaster drill. Students were notified of the Code Orange via email, a pager system, and group SMS text message. Twenty-five students participated in the drill, while the three remaining student leaders worked with the ED staff and HazMat Branch Director to ensure that all protocols were followed properly. Five groups of five students took turns donning HazMat gear, decontaminating three mannequins (an infant, a child, and an unconscious adult), and then safely removing the gear.

RESULTS: All modes of communication were received within 5 min, and all the students arrived at the ED within 20 min. The decontamination was determined to be sufficient by the team leader, Emergency Department staff, and HazMat Branch Director and was completed approximately 10 min after the entrance to the decontamination chamber.

CONCLUSIONS: Current US medical school curricula lack emergency preparedness training in response to potential terrorist attacks and hazardous material exposures. Our program, while still in its early workings, not only allows students to develop critical knowledge and practical skills but also provides a unique opportunity to leverage much-needed manpower and resources during emergency situations.


Language: en

Keywords

Biochemical warfare; Decontamination; Disaster medicine; Disaster relief; Education; Emergency medicine; Emergency preparedness; Medical student; Simulation; Terrorism

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