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Creating a Health Emergency and Disaster Risk Management (EDRM) Learning Community

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 July 2023

Donald Donahue
Affiliation:
University of Maryland Baltimore, Baltimore, USA
Paul Barach
Affiliation:
Thomas Jefferson University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, USA University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
Raymond Swienton
Affiliation:
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, USA
Jan-Cedric Hansen
Affiliation:
Centre d'Hébergement et d'Accompagnement Gérontologique, Pacy-sur-Eure, France
Curt Harris
Affiliation:
University of Georgia College of Public Health, Athens, USA
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Abstract

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Introduction:

Disaster research is primarily posthoc analysis, locally focused or within response organizations, overlooking the wellness and safety of first and second responders or the broad multi- and interdisciplinary activities necessary to foster and sustain recovery. A broad framework to span locality, institutional, and professional boundaries supports the development of a true learning community–a health EDRM sector that supports society in recognizing lessons, refining findings, and free and fluid global sharing.

Method:

Several organizations joined to create a robust disaster health learning community: CREDO, GloHSA, ICDM, and ECDM, a multi-national, multi-disciplinary collaborative network of patients, universities, societies, regulators, publishing, healthcare, and technology partners designed to foster expert level education and training with shared educational design concepts, milestones, and core curricula that embrace the strength of a standardized base upon which to link unique pillars of excellence of separate functions, institutions, nations, and regions.

Results:

The Emergency Disaster Global Health Sciences (EDGHS) model developed by University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center is interactive, open, and responsive. EDGHS addresses critical gaps in applied research by convening leaders across the healthcare and public health continuum to map the way forward, designing and implementing high-quality, evidence-based practical and policy research.

This defines essential public health functions for national contexts, including a focus on emergency preparedness and response, strengthening competency-based education on essential public health functions, and mapping and measurement of occupations delivering EDRM functions, offering an exportable model of global relevance.

Conclusion:

Putting disaster prevention into recovery processes is a strategic opportunity to improve the well-being of future generations. The survivability and well-being needs of present and future generations are contingent on knowledge-based, lived experiences of recoverable disaster loss and damage, and the capacity to thrive sustainably. This presentation serves as an invitation to join the growing momentum of creating a learning health EDRM community.

Type
Poster Presentations
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine