Disasters on campus: A cross-sectional survey of college EMS systems' preparedness to respond to mass casualty incidents.

Q3 Medicine
Matthew A Tovar, Catherine H Zwemer, Christopher M Wend, Andrew C Meltzer, Babak Sarani, James P Phillips
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: The objective of this study was to assess the training and readiness levels of Collegiate Emergency Medical Service (EMS) providers to respond to mass casualty incidents (MCIs).

Methods: An anonymous cross-sectional survey of Collegiate EMS providers was performed.

Participants: Participants were US-based EMS providers affiliated with the National Collegiate Emergency Medical Services Foundation.

Outcome measures: The main outcome measures were levels of EMS experience and MCI training, subjective readiness levels for responding to various MCI scenarios, and analyzing the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on MCI response capabilities.

Results: Respondents had a median age of 21 years (interquartile range IQR 20, 22), with 86 percent (n = 96/112) being trained to the Emergency Medical Technician-Basic level. Providers reported participating in an average of 1.6 MCI trainings over the last four years (IQR, 1.0, 2.2). Subjective MCI response readiness levels were highest with active assailant attacks followed by large event evacuations, natural disasters, hazardous material (HAZMAT) incidents, targeted automobile ramming attacks, explosions, and finally bioweapons release. Disparate to this, only 18 percent of participants reported training in the fundamentals of tactical and disaster medicine. With respect to the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on MCI readiness, 27 percent of respondents reported being less prepared, and there was a statistically significant decrease in subjective readiness to respond to HAZMAT incidents.

Conclusion: Given low rates of MCI training but high rates of self-assessed MCI preparedness, respondents may overestimate their readiness to adequately respond to the complexity of a real-world MCI. More objective assessment measures are needed to evaluate provider preparedness.

校园灾难:对高校急救系统应对大规模伤亡事件的准备情况进行横向调查。
研究目的本研究旨在评估高校紧急医疗服务(EMS)提供者应对大规模伤亡事件(MCIs)的培训和准备水平:方法:对高校急救医疗服务提供者进行匿名横断面调查:结果测量:主要结果指标包括:急救经验和 MCI 培训水平、应对各种 MCI 情景的主观准备水平,以及分析 COVID-19 大流行对 MCI 应对能力的影响:受访者的年龄中位数为 21 岁(四分位数间距 IQR 为 20、22),86%(n = 96/112)的受访者接受过急救医疗技术员基础级别的培训。在过去四年中,医疗服务提供者平均参加了 1.6 次 MCI 培训(IQR:1.0,2.2)。主观 MCI 响应准备水平最高的是主动攻击,其次是大型活动疏散、自然灾害、危险材料(HAZMAT)事件、有针对性的汽车冲撞攻击、爆炸,最后是生物武器泄漏。与此不同的是,只有 18% 的参与者报告接受过战术和灾难医学基础知识的培训。关于 COVID-19 大流行病对 MCI 准备状态的影响,27% 的受访者表示准备不足,而且在应对危险、有害和有毒物质事件的主观准备状态方面出现了统计学意义上的显著下降:结论:鉴于受访者接受过创伤性脑损伤培训的比例较低,但自我评估创伤性脑损伤准备程度的比例较高,受访者可能高估了自己应对实际创伤性脑损伤复杂性的准备程度。需要更多客观的评估措施来评估提供商的准备情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
American journal of disaster medicine
American journal of disaster medicine Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: With the publication of the American Journal of Disaster Medicine, for the first time, comes real guidance in this new medical specialty from the country"s foremost experts in areas most physicians and medical professionals have never seen…a deadly cocktail of catastrophic events like blast wounds and post explosion injuries, biological weapons contamination and mass physical and psychological trauma that comes in the wake of natural disasters and disease outbreak. The journal has one goal: to provide physicians and medical professionals the essential informational tools they need as they seek to combine emergency medical and trauma skills with crisis management and new forms of triage.
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