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Disaster Preparedness among Health Professionals and Support Staff: What is Effective? An Integrative Literature Review

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 March 2017

Jeremy R. Gowing*
Affiliation:
St Vincent’s Private Hospital Sydney, New South Wales, Australia University of Tasmania, School of Health Science, Tasmania, Australia
Kim N. Walker
Affiliation:
St Vincent’s Private Hospital Sydney, New South Wales, Australia University of Tasmania, School of Health Science, Tasmania, Australia
Shandell L. Elmer
Affiliation:
University of Tasmania, School of Health Science, Tasmania, Australia
Elizabeth A. Cummings
Affiliation:
University of Tasmania, School of Health Science, Tasmania, Australia
*
Correspondence: Jeremy R. Gowing MN St Vincent’s Private Hospital Sydney 406 Victoria St. Darlinghurst, NSW, 2010 Australia E-mail: Jeremy.gowing@svha.org.au

Abstract

Introduction

It is important that health professionals and support staff are prepared for disasters to safeguard themselves and the community during disasters. There has been a significantly heightened focus on disasters since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 in New York (USA); however, despite this, it is evident that health professionals and support staff may not be adequately prepared for disasters.

Report

An integrative literature review was performed based on a keyword search of the major health databases for primary research evaluating preparedness of health professionals and support staff. The literature was quality appraised using a mixed-methods appraisal tool (MMAT), and a thematic analysis was completed to identify current knowledge and gaps.

Discussion

The main themes identified were: health professionals and support staff may not be fully prepared for disasters; the most effective content and methods for disaster preparedness is unknown; and the willingness of health professionals and support staff to attend work and perform during disasters needs further evaluation. Gaps were identified to guide further research and the creation of new knowledge to best prepare for disasters. These included the need for: high-quality research to evaluate the best content and methods of disaster preparedness; inclusion of the multi-disciplinary health care team as participants; preparation for internal disasters; the development of validated competencies for preparedness; validated tools for measurement; and the importance of performance in actual disasters to evaluate preparation.

Conclusion

The literature identified that all types of disaster preparedness activities lead to improvements in knowledge, skills, or attitude preparedness for disasters. Most studies focused on external disasters and the preparedness of medical, nursing, public health, or paramedic professionals. There needs to be a greater focus on the whole health care team, including allied health professionals and support staff, for both internal and external disasters. Evaluation during real disasters and the use of validated competencies and tools to deliver and evaluate disaster preparedness will enhance knowledge of best practice preparedness. However, of the 36 research articles included in this review, only five were rated at 100% using the MMAT. Due to methodological weakness of the research reviewed, the findings cannot be generalized, nor can the most effective method be determined.

GowingJR, WalkerKN, ElmerSL, CummingsEA. Disaster Preparedness among Health Professionals and Support Staff: What is Effective? An Integrative Literature Review. Prehosp Disaster Med. 2017;32(3):321–328.

Type
Comprehensive Review
Copyright
© World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 2017 

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Footnotes

Conflicts of interest: none

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