Multi-centre full-scale simulations in hospital pharmacies to improve disaster preparedness
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Download: FIP20_simulations.pdf (602.60 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_675DCB97492B
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Multi-centre full-scale simulations in hospital pharmacies to improve disaster preparedness
Title of the conference
Pharmacy Education
Organization
International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) Virtual 2020
Address
September 4-25, 2020
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
20
Number
3
Pages
142
Language
english
Abstract
Background: Disaster management in hospital pharmacies is poorly studied and trained for.
Purpose: To assess the benefit of full-scale simulations to improve hospitals pharmacists’ disaster preparedness in Switzerland.
Method: Successive full-scale simulations were realised in four hospital pharmacies. The full-scale simulations were approximatively six months apart. Three scenarios were created by an inter-professional team. Each scenario represented credible regional disasters with approximatively 50 casualties (multiple-vehicle collision, terrorist attacks and internal technical failures, respectively). Four evaluators used evaluation grids to judge participants during the simulation (rating on a scale of 1-5).
Results: All hospitals performed the initial simulation, two completed the second run and a last one realised a third exercise. The mean duration of simulations was 3.3 hours. On average, the four hospitals responded to 69% (±6%) of the expected actions. Differences between exercise one and two were observed. The average rate of action achieved increased from 64% to 79% (p<0.005). Moreover, the quality of these actions improved from 3.9/5 to 4.2/5 for these two hospitals (p<0.005). The first simulation resulted in both hospital pharmacies to create a disaster plan and train their staff on it.
Conclusion: This study highlights the value of full-scale disaster simulations for hospital pharmacies. The number of correct actions increased significantly. Globally, the full-scale simulations have improved the preparedness of the hospital pharmacies involved and promoted staff awareness. Results of further simulations in the four hospitals and others are warranted to confirm these preliminary observations.
Purpose: To assess the benefit of full-scale simulations to improve hospitals pharmacists’ disaster preparedness in Switzerland.
Method: Successive full-scale simulations were realised in four hospital pharmacies. The full-scale simulations were approximatively six months apart. Three scenarios were created by an inter-professional team. Each scenario represented credible regional disasters with approximatively 50 casualties (multiple-vehicle collision, terrorist attacks and internal technical failures, respectively). Four evaluators used evaluation grids to judge participants during the simulation (rating on a scale of 1-5).
Results: All hospitals performed the initial simulation, two completed the second run and a last one realised a third exercise. The mean duration of simulations was 3.3 hours. On average, the four hospitals responded to 69% (±6%) of the expected actions. Differences between exercise one and two were observed. The average rate of action achieved increased from 64% to 79% (p<0.005). Moreover, the quality of these actions improved from 3.9/5 to 4.2/5 for these two hospitals (p<0.005). The first simulation resulted in both hospital pharmacies to create a disaster plan and train their staff on it.
Conclusion: This study highlights the value of full-scale disaster simulations for hospital pharmacies. The number of correct actions increased significantly. Globally, the full-scale simulations have improved the preparedness of the hospital pharmacies involved and promoted staff awareness. Results of further simulations in the four hospitals and others are warranted to confirm these preliminary observations.
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Create date
12/11/2020 18:24
Last modification date
19/01/2022 17:27