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Journal Article

Citation

Curtis HA, Trang K, Chason KW, Biddinger PD. Prehosp. Disaster Med. 2018; 33(1): 7-12.

Affiliation

3Massachusetts General Hospital,Boston,MassachusettsUSA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/S1049023X1700718X

PMID

29317001

Abstract

Introduction Great demands have been placed on disaster medicine educators. There is a need to develop innovative methods to educate Emergency Physicians in the ever-expanding body of disaster medicine knowledge. The authors sought to demonstrate that video-based learning (VBL) could be a promising alternative to traditional learning methods for teaching disaster medicine core competencies. Hypothesis/Problem The objective was to compare VBL to traditional lecture (TL) for instructing Emergency Medicine residents in the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP; Irving, Texas USA) disaster medicine core competencies of patient triage and decontamination.

METHODS: A randomized, controlled pilot study compared two methods of instruction for mass triage, decontamination, and personal protective equipment (PPE). Emergency Medicine resident learning was measured with a knowledge quiz, a Likert scale measuring comfort, and a practical exercise. An independent samples t-test compared the scoring of the VBL with the TL group.

RESULTS: Twenty-six residents were randomized to VBL (n=13) or TL (n=13). Knowledge score improvement following video (14.9%) versus lecture (14.1%) did not differ significantly between the groups (P=.74). Comfort score improvement also did not differ (P=.64) between video (18.3%) and lecture groups (15.8%). In the practical skills assessment, the VBL group outperformed the TL group overall (70.4% vs 55.5%; P<.0001), with significantly better performance in donning PPE and decontamination. Although not part of the original study design, a three-month post-hoc analysis was performed. When comparing the pre-intervention and three-month post-hoc performances, there were no significant differences in knowledge increases between VBL versus TL (P=.41) or in comfort (P=.39).

CONCLUSION: Video modules can be as effective as TL when utilized to train Emergency Medicine residents in the ACEP disaster medicine core competencies of patient triage and decontamination. Curtis HA , Trang K , Chason KW , Biddinger PD. Video-based learning vs traditional lecture for instructing emergency medicine residents in disaster medicine principles of mass triage, decontamination, and personal protective equipment.


Language: en

Keywords

ACEP American College of Emergency Physicians; CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CPR cardiopulmonary resuscitation; PGY post-graduate year; PPE personal protective equipment; TL traditional lecture; VBL video-based learning; decontamination; disaster medicine; emergency medicine residents; mass triage; personal protective equipment; traditional lecture; video-based learning

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