OPEN ACCESSMarch 14, 2007Teaching Outbreak Preparedness in the Emergency Medicine Clerkship: An Innovative Approach Larissa May, MD Larissa May, MD George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences Google Scholar More articles by this author https://doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.586 SectionsAbout ToolsDownload Citations ShareFacebookTwitterEmail AbstractClinicians should be competent at contagious disease outbreak detection and management. Given the threat of emerging infectious diseases and biowarfare, there is a need to develop instructional methods on these topics. Presented here is a case-based exercise addressing sentinel case recognition, reporting, and containment. This workshop, conducted for medical students during their emergency medicine clerkship, incorporates the core competencies of systems-based practice, practice-based learning, and patient care. The workshop is held in a hospital conference room with internet, telephone, and other resources available, simulating real life. A hypothetical case of Ebola presenting to an emergency department is outlined. Participants are divided into small groups representing the physician, the local health department, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the hospital administration, infection control, and the laboratory director. Each group has 30 minutes to define its roles and responsibilities in preparation for the hypothetical outbreak. A companion manuscript is provided. Each small group then presents its approach to responding to the outbreak. Next, the faculty facilitator gives a 45-minute lecture. Pre- and postworkshop surveys indicated that this resource is useful. The format of the workshop is easy to reproduce and can serve as a foundation for a curriculum in emerging infections and communicable disease management or be applied to other educational topics. Pre- and postworkshop surveys also indicated a statistically significant improvement in students’ comfort with accessing available resources in the event of an outbreak. Educational Objectives By the end of this case-based exercise, learners will be able to: Recognize potential sentinel cases for an outbreak.Be familiar with mechanisms for outbreak reporting.Identify measures that can be taken toward outbreak containment in the emergency department.Identify available resources for contagious disease outbreak detection. Sign up for the latest publications from MedEdPORTAL Add your email below FILES INCLUDEDReferencesRelatedDetails FILES INCLUDED Included in this publication: Instructor's Guide.doc Workshop Instructions.ppt Workshop Manuscript.doc Emerging Infections Lecture.ppt Pre-Post Workshop Evaluation Forms.doc To view all publication components, extract (i.e., unzip) them from the downloaded .zip file. Download editor’s noteThis publication may contain technology or a display format that is no longer in use. CitationMay L. Teaching Outbreak Preparedness in the Emergency Medicine Clerkship: An Innovative Approach. MedEdPORTAL. 2007;3:586. https://doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.586 Copyright & Permissions© 2007 May. This is an open-access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike license.KeywordsInfectious OutbreaksInfectious DiseasesBiowarfareVirusCommunicable DiseaseDisease OutbreaksBioterrorismInfection Control Disclosures None to report. Funding/Support None to report. Prior Presentations Workshop and poster presented at: AAMC Annual Meeting; October 2006; Seattle, WA. Loading ...