Dutch senior medical students and disaster medicine: a national survey

被引:38
|
作者
Mortelmans L.J.M. [1 ,2 ]
Bouman S.J.M. [3 ]
Gaakeer M.I. [3 ]
Dieltiens G. [1 ]
Anseeuw K. [1 ]
Sabbe M.B. [2 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Department of Emergency Medicine ZNA camp Stuivenberg, Lange Beeldekensstraat 267, Antwerp
[2] Center for Research and Education in Emergency Care, Leuven
[3] Department of Emergency Medicine Admiraal De Ruyterhospital, Goes
[4] Department of Emergency Medicine University Hospital Gasthuisberg, Leuven
关键词
Curriculum; Disaster medicine; Education; Medical students;
D O I
10.1186/s12245-015-0077-0
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Medical students have been deployed in victim care of several disasters throughout history. They are corner stones in first-line care in recent pandemic planning. Furthermore, every physician and senior medical student is expected to assist in case of disaster situations, but are they educated to do so? Being one of Europe’s densest populated countries with multiple nuclear installations, a large petrochemical industry and also at risk for terrorist attacks, The Netherlands bear some risks for incidents. We evaluated the knowledge on Disaster Medicine in the Dutch medical curriculum. Our hypothesis is that Dutch senior medical students are not prepared at all. Methods: Senior Dutch medical students were invited through their faculty to complete an online survey on Disaster Medicine, training and knowledge. This reported knowledge was tested by a mixed set of 10 theoretical and practical questions. Results: With a mean age of 25.5 years and 60 % females, 999 participants completed the survey. Of the participants, 51 % considered that Disaster Medicine should absolutely be taught in the regular medical curriculum and only 2 % felt it as useless; 13 % stated to have some knowledge on disaster medicine. Self-estimated capability to deal with various disaster situations varied from 1.47/10 in nuclear incidents to 3.92/10 in influenza pandemics. Self-estimated knowledge on these incidents is in the same line (1.71/10 for nuclear incidents and 4.27/10 in pandemics). Despite this limited knowledge and confidence, there is a high willingness to respond (ranging from 4.31/10 in Ebola outbreak over 5.21/10 in nuclear incidents to 7.54/10 in pandemics). The case/theoretical mix gave a mean score of 3.71/10 and raised some food for thought. Although a positive attitude, 48 % will place contaminated walking wounded in a waiting room and 53 % would use iodine tablets as first step in nuclear decontamination. Of the participants, 52 % even believes that these tablets protect against external radiation, 41 % thinks that these tablets limit radiation effects more than shielding and 57 % believes that decontamination of chemical victims consists of a specific antidote spray in military cabins. Conclusions: Despite a high willingness to respond, our students are not educated for disaster situations. © 2015, Mortelmans et al.
引用
收藏
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Overnight Hospital Experiences for Medical Students: Results of the 2014 Clerkship Directors in Internal Medicine National Survey
    Goren, Eric N.
    Leizman, Debra S.
    La Rochelle, Jeffrey
    Kogan, Jennifer R.
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2015, 30 (09) : 1245 - 1250
  • [32] Overnight Hospital Experiences for Medical Students: Results of the 2014 Clerkship Directors in Internal Medicine National Survey
    Eric N. Goren
    Debra S. Leizman
    Jeffrey La Rochelle
    Jennifer R. Kogan
    Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2015, 30 : 1245 - 1250
  • [33] SUBSTANCE USE AMONG SENIOR MEDICAL-STUDENTS - A SURVEY OF 23 MEDICAL-SCHOOLS
    BALDWIN, DC
    HUGHES, PH
    CONARD, SE
    STORR, CL
    SHEEHAN, DV
    JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1991, 265 (16): : 2074 - 2078
  • [34] A national survey on the effect of pharmaceutical promotion on medical students
    Vainiomäki, M
    Helve, O
    Vuorenkoski, L
    MEDICAL TEACHER, 2004, 26 (07) : 630 - 634
  • [35] National survey of UK medical students on the perception of neurology
    Pakpoor, Julia
    Handel, Adam E.
    Disanto, Giulio
    Davenport, Richard J.
    Giovannoni, Gavin
    Ramagopalan, Sreeram V.
    BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2014, 14
  • [36] Sexual Harassment of Canadian Medical Students: A National Survey
    Phillips, Susan P.
    Webber, Jenna
    Imbeau, Stephan
    Quaife, Tanis
    Hagan, Deanna
    Maar, Marion
    Abourbih, Jacques
    ECLINICALMEDICINE, 2019, 7 : 15 - 20
  • [37] Cardiothoracic Surgery: National Survey of Medical Students' Perspectives
    Al-Nusair, L.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2021, 108
  • [38] The National Student Survey: validation in Portuguese medical students
    Martins, Maria Joao
    Marques, Tiago Reis
    Lains, Ines
    Leal, Ines
    Pessanha, Ines
    Brochado, Bruno
    Santos, Manuel Oliveira
    Teixeira, Pedro Pinto
    Fernandes, Diogo Hipolito
    Silva, Joao Carlos
    Sampaio, Filipa Almeida
    Brandao, Mariana
    Morais, Ines
    Laranjinha, Ines
    Teixeira, Nelson
    Fernandes, Tiago
    Carneiro, Diogo
    Calvao, Joana
    Pratas, Miguel
    Palmela, Carolina
    Lima, Antonio
    Pires, Guilherme
    Reis, Joel
    Raimundo, Miguel
    Afonso, Raquel Rocha
    Costa e Silva, Miguel
    Quintas, Catarina
    Rodrigues, Tiago M.
    Coelho, Nuno Henriques
    Ramos, Sonia Afonso
    Policiano, Catarina
    Rato, Catarina
    Faria, Daniel Candeias
    Lopes, Alice
    Rodrigues, Joana Ramos
    Ferreira, Afonso Nunes
    Costeira, Filipa de Sousa
    Marques, Renata
    Cordeiro, Hugo
    Richardson, John T. E.
    ASSESSMENT & EVALUATION IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2019, 44 (01) : 66 - 79
  • [39] National survey of UK medical students on the perception of neurology
    Julia Pakpoor
    Adam E Handel
    Giulio Disanto
    Richard J Davenport
    Gavin Giovannoni
    Sreeram V Ramagopalan
    BMC Medical Education, 14
  • [40] LGBTQIA health in medical education: a national survey of Australian medical students
    Wynn, Sophia Nicolades
    Solanki, Pravik
    Millington, Jayde
    Copeland, Anthony
    Lu, Jessie
    Mcnair, Ruth
    Sanchez, Asiel Adan
    BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2024, 24 (01)