Dunning Dianne, Martin Michael P, Tickel Jimmy L, Gentry William B, Cowen Peter, Slenning Barrett D
Animal Welfare, Ethics & Public Policy Program, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27606-1499, USA.
J Vet Med Educ. 2009 Fall;36(3):317-30. doi: 10.3138/jvme/013.
The nation's veterinary colleges lack the curricula necessary to meet veterinary demands for animal/public health and emergency preparedness. To this end, the authors report a literature review summarizing training programs within human/veterinary medicine. In addition, the authors describe new competency-based Veterinary Credential Responder training at North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine (NCSU CVM). From an evaluation of 257 PubMed-derived articles relating to veterinary/medical disaster training, 14 fulfilled all inclusion requirements (nine were veterinary oriented; five came from human medical programs). Few offered ideas on the core competencies required to produce disaster-planning and response professionals. The lack of published literature in this area points to a need for more formal discussion and research on core competencies. Non-veterinary articles emphasized learning objectives, commonly listing an incident command system, the National Incident Management System, teamwork, communications, and critical event management/problem solving. These learning objectives were accomplished either through short-course formats or via their integration into a larger curriculum. Formal disaster training in veterinary medicine mostly occurs within existing public health courses. Much of the literature focuses on changing academia to meet current and future needs in public/animal health disaster-preparedness and careers. The NCSU CVM program, in collaboration with North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Service, Emergency Programs and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Public Health, operates as a stand-alone third-year two-week core-curriculum training program that combines lecture, online, experiential, and group exercises to meet entry-level federal credentialing requirements. The authors report here its content, outcomes, and future development plans.
该国的兽医学院缺乏满足兽医在动物/公共卫生及应急准备方面需求所需的课程。为此,作者报告了一项文献综述,总结了人类医学/兽医学领域的培训项目。此外,作者还介绍了北卡罗来纳州立大学兽医学院(NCSU CVM)基于能力的新型兽医资质响应者培训。通过对257篇来自PubMed且与兽医/医学灾难培训相关的文章进行评估,有14篇符合所有纳入要求(9篇以兽医为导向;5篇来自人类医学项目)。很少有文章就培养灾难规划和应对专业人员所需的核心能力提出见解。该领域缺乏已发表的文献表明需要对核心能力进行更正式的讨论和研究。非兽医类文章强调学习目标,通常列出事件指挥系统、国家事件管理系统、团队合作、沟通以及关键事件管理/问题解决。这些学习目标通过短期课程形式或融入更大的课程来实现。兽医学中的正式灾难培训大多在现有的公共卫生课程中进行。许多文献关注如何改变学术界以满足公共/动物卫生灾难准备及职业方面的当前和未来需求。NCSU CVM项目与北卡罗来纳州农业和消费者服务部应急项目以及北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校公共卫生学院合作,作为一个独立的三年级为期两周的核心课程培训项目开展,该项目结合讲座、在线学习、实践和小组练习,以满足初级联邦认证要求。作者在此报告其内容、成果及未来发展计划。