Understanding skill decay and skill maintenance in first responders

IF 1.1 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Samuel Woodman, C. Bearman, P. Hayes
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

To carry out their roles, first responders need to have appropriate skills. It is important to identify and train in key skills appropriate for the tasks that first responders will perform. Once these skills have been acquired, they need to be maintained otherwise they will decay to the point where performance of the skill is no longer acceptable. This means that emergency services organisations need programs that appropriately maintain the skills of their volunteers and employees. To deliver cost-effective training, these organisations need a good understanding of what key skills are required for tasks that are regularly performed, why and how quickly these skills decay and how these skills can be maintained. To help emergency services organisations better understand these important concepts, this paper reviews relevant literature on skill decay and skill maintenance. Task decomposition methods and training needs analysis are introduced to assist organisations determine what key skills they require. This provides information to make sound, evidence-based decisions about recurrent training programs that can maintain the skills required by first responders and retain efficacy in the organisation.
了解急救人员的技能衰减和技能维持
为了履行他们的职责,急救人员需要具备适当的技能。重要的是要确定和培训适合于第一响应者将执行的任务的关键技能。一旦玩家获得了这些技能,他们便需要保持这些技能,否则它们便会衰退到玩家不再能够接受这些技能的地步。这意味着应急服务组织需要适当维护其志愿者和员工技能的项目。为了提供具有成本效益的培训,这些组织需要很好地了解定期执行的任务需要哪些关键技能,这些技能衰退的原因和速度,以及如何保持这些技能。为了帮助应急服务组织更好地理解这些重要的概念,本文回顾了有关技能衰退和技能维护的相关文献。介绍了任务分解方法和培训需求分析,以帮助组织确定他们需要哪些关键技能。这为制定合理的、基于证据的经常性培训计划提供了信息,这些计划可以保持第一响应者所需的技能,并保持组织的有效性。
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
Australian Journal of Emergency Management
Australian Journal of Emergency Management PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
22.20%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: The Australian Journal of Emergency Management is an academic journal in emergency management covering all hazards and all emergencies with a primary focus on the Oceania region. The journal includes research and practice as well as issues from government policy to community engagement. The AJEM focuses on risk reduction, readiness, response, recovery and resilience particularly for Australasia, New Zealand and the Pacific region. Research presented in the AJEM is evidence-based and peer-reviewed. AJEM is an open access publication under a Creative Commons [CC BY-NC] license. This allows free and immediate access to scholarly articles and industry news and views. The AJEM does not charge author fees.
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