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Improving Hazardous Material Incident Preparedness for Emergency Medicine Physician Trainees: A Quality Improvement Project
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 July 2023
Abstract
Hazardous materials (HazMat) training is not a requirement for accreditation of US Emergency Medicine (EM) residencies, nor for EM board certification by the American Board of Emergency Medicine (ABEM). However, the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) requires hospitals train all personnel expected to deal with contaminated patients. This QI project aimed to develop an EM physician-specific HazMat course and evaluate the physician comfort level with HazMat personal protective equipment (PPE) donning and doffing, triage, procedural skills, and decontamination.
A four-hour “HazMat for Docs” course was designed at a large urban academic trauma center and offered to second-year EM residents. Additionally, we performed a quantitative survey of a cohort of 72 current and recently graduated EM residents (classes 2019-2024), some of whom had taken the course in person. Our primary outcome was to measure improvement in comfort level with essential HazMat tasks after completing the course. Our secondary outcome was to evaluate the current or recently graduated EM physician's overall comfort levels with managing a HazMat incident, as well as HazMat skills and knowledge retention.
A total of 53 responses (73.6%) were obtained. 45.3% of the respondents were male and 54.7% female. 37.8% of the respondents were recent EM graduates, with 20.8% PGY-4, 13.2% PGY-3, 15.1% PGY-2, 13.2% PGY-1. 16/53 (30.2%) had prior EMS experience. EM Physicians were most comfortable with donning and doffing PPE (4.92 on a 7-point scale) and least comfortable with decontamination procedures (2.98/7). After completing the HazMat course, EM physicians increased their comfort level with HazMat decontamination procedures by 8.6% and with organizing a multi-disciplinary ED HazMat response by 10.5%.
EM Physician comfort levels with HazMat procedures are low. Increased training aimed at improving physician knowledge, preparedness, and comfort level for such events is necessary and can be accomplished through a short course.
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- Poster Presentations
- Information
- Prehospital and Disaster Medicine , Volume 38 , Supplement S1: 22nd Congress on Disaster and Emergency Medicine , May 2023 , pp. s150 - s151
- Copyright
- © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine