Examining the disaster medicine curriculum in Canadian Emergency Medicine enhanced skills programs

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Abstract

Objectives: Disaster medicine teaching is an important, and understudied, component of EM residency training programs. Little is known about disaster medicine training in Canadian EM programs, particularly within the 1-year EM enhanced skills programs. The purpose of this study is to (1) understand which disaster medicine topics are currently taught in EM enhanced skills programs and (2) establish a list of the highest priority disaster medicine teaching topics for those programs. Methods: We distributed an eight-question survey to all 31 EM enhanced skills site directors across Canada by email. Questions on the survey asked which of 39 disaster medicine subtopics were (1) currently taught and (2) should be taught to EM enhanced skills residents. Results: Of 31 invited participants, 16 completed the study (52% response rate). The most taught topic was introduction to disaster medicine/nomenclature (13/16 programs), while 11/16 programs currently teach decontamination indications and issues, personal protective equipment, prehospital disaster management, and trauma mass casualty incidents. Topics reported high or essential priority for teaching included introduction to disaster medicine/nomenclature (12/16 programs), decontamination indications and issues, personal protective equipment, and prehospital disaster management (11/16 programs). Conclusions: This study identified disaster medicine topics currently taught at Canadian EM enhanced skills programs, along with recommending a list of priority teaching topics. These findings can inform future disaster medicine content in EM training program curricula.

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Belyea, A., Jain, T., & Sibley, A. (2023). Examining the disaster medicine curriculum in Canadian Emergency Medicine enhanced skills programs. Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine, 25(5), 382–386. https://doi.org/10.1007/s43678-023-00478-2

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