Abstract

Introduction:As disasters increase globally in both frequency and intensity, the vulnerability of children during disasters has become obvious. Pediatricians are often left to manage the resulting physical and mental repercussions. With minimal to no disaster medicine training offered at most U.S. pediatric residencies, the need for an easily accessible pediatric disaster medicine curriculum has been exacerbated. While this need has been highlighted in the literature, material to include or methods to sustainably incorporate disaster medicine into training programs has not been established.Method:From a thorough literature review, 19 topics were selected as potentially necessary to include in a disaster medicine curriculum for pediatric residents. Utilizing the Delphi method, subject matter experts were asked to rank these topics with an option to add others. Two independent surveys separated by time were administered with the goal of identifying ten critical core concepts for pediatric resident disaster medicine education. A virtual roundtable discussion then took place to finalize the ten core concepts, discuss objectives, and consider realistic methods of incorporating the curriculum into the residency timeline.Results:The ten core concepts identified were 1) introduction to disaster medicine, 2) patient triage, 3) surge capability, 4) mental health effects of a disaster, 5) preparedness for children with special healthcare needs, 6) communicating personal/family disaster preparedness, 7) hospital disaster mitigation, 8) reunification, 9) drills and training, and 10) disaster ethics and crisis standards of care.Experts agreed upon a longitudinal multi-modal approach with inclusion of short didactics, case scenarios, questions/answers, games, and links to further educational activities and opportunities focused on individualized needs.Conclusion:The Delphi method was a successful approach to gathering expert consensus to establish core concepts for a pediatric resident disaster medicine curriculum.

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