Pandemic Scenario Tabletop Exercise

Abstract State governments have been charged with planning for a worldwide or nationwide pandemic using the avian (H5N1) flu as a model since it has the potential to be the next pandemic. This is an active-learning large and small group tabletop exercise designed to prepare learners for a pandemic....

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:MedEdPORTAL
Main Authors: Janet Lindemann, Matthew Owens, Chris Qualm, Sandy Frentz, Chuck Kevghas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Association of American Medical Colleges 2007
Subjects:
Flu
edu
psy
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.692
https://doaj.org/article/066dddb4777d4634aa69c520db07add5
Description
Summary:Abstract State governments have been charged with planning for a worldwide or nationwide pandemic using the avian (H5N1) flu as a model since it has the potential to be the next pandemic. This is an active-learning large and small group tabletop exercise designed to prepare learners for a pandemic. A tabletop exercise is a paper-based, time-sequenced activity where participants take their own role in a fictitious scenario based on possible or probable events. As the pandemic emerges on paper, the groups work the scenario and face not only epidemiologic and clinical issues, but moral and professional issues as well. Suitable for medical students, residents or practicing physicians this activity can stand alone as a 2-hour unit or be part of a larger emergency preparation workshop. Participants are instructed to work the scenario as if it is happening in real time. The significance of our tabletop exercise is to place medical students into the scenario of an avian flu pandemic. In our case, the development of this resource has resulted in a critical collaboration between state and local government and medical school, which can be accessed in the future. As for student evaluation of the exercise, third-year medical students rated this exercise highest of all activities during a week-long educational program. The tabletop exercise may stand alone or be linked with other content relating to emergency management or the threat of the avian (H5N1) flu as the cause of a pandemic. Because learners are typically unfamiliar with the concept of incident command, it is recommended that the exercise includes a presentation on this topic between the second and third stages of the exercise.