Improved Casualty Depiction System for Simulated Mass Casualty Exercises.

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Military Medicine Pub Date : 2025-01-16 DOI:10.1093/milmed/usae361
Eric G Meyer, Loxley Godshall-Bennett, Arianna Moreno, Grace Guo, Natalie May, Chelsea M Spencer, James Schwartz, Leslie R Vojta, Sherri L Rudinsky
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Abstract

Introduction: Assessing military medical teams' ability to respond to large-scale mass casualty (MASCAL) events has become a priority in preparing for future conflicts. MASCAL exercises rely on large numbers of simulated patients with limited medical training. Role-players must be appropriately prepared to ensure that medical exercises adequately assess the expected capabilities of military medical units. The Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) has evaluated future military providers for decades using a large-scale, multiday, immersive simulation called Bushmaster. Despite a robust casualty training system, the fidelity of the portrayals remained limited.

Materials and methods: Through collaboration with national military medical experts, a comprehensive casualty depiction system was developed. This system relied on structured casualty cards linked to time-based illness scripts. Structured casualty cards included an appropriate balance of disease non-battle injuries and trauma, included multipatient presentations based on shared events (i.e., multiple injured personnel due to an aircraft crash), normal and pathologic combat stress, population/unit considerations, requirements for different roles within the medical unit, and expected clinical outcomes. Illness scripts, supplemented by video guides, included time-based courses of illness/injury and prescribed responses to different typical treatments. This system was piloted during an annual MASCAL exercise (Operation Bushmaster) at USUHS. Clinical faculty were queried on the fidelity of this new system while role-players were evaluated on feasibility.

Results: Three hundred casualty cards linked to 49 illness scripts were created, peer-reviewed, and piloted at Bushmaster. A total of 170 military members with limited medical training portrayed simulated patients utilizing the new casualty depiction system. Clinical faculty members strongly agreed that the improved casualty depiction system improved the realism of individual patient presentations (96%). Eighty-three percent of role-players strongly agreed that the casualty depiction system was easy to understand.

Conclusions: This improved casualty depiction system was a feasible approach to enhance the fidelity of a MASCAL exercise. It has since been shared with military medical units around the globe to assist with their MASCAL exercises, making future multisite evaluations of this casualty depiction system possible.

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用于模拟大规模伤亡演习的改进型伤亡描述系统。
介绍:评估军事医疗队应对大规模大规模伤亡(MASCAL)事件的能力已成为为未来冲突做准备的首要任务。MASCAL 演习依赖于大量接受过有限医疗培训的模拟病人。角色扮演者必须做好充分准备,以确保医疗演习能充分评估军事医疗单位的预期能力。几十年来,美国卫生科学统一服务大学(USUHS)一直使用一种名为 "Bushmaster "的大规模、多日、沉浸式模拟演习来评估未来的军事医疗人员。尽管有强大的伤员培训系统,但模拟的逼真度仍然有限:通过与国家军事医学专家合作,开发了一套全面的伤员描绘系统。该系统依赖于与基于时间的疾病脚本相连接的结构化伤员卡。结构化伤员卡包括非战斗性疾病伤害和创伤的适当平衡,包括基于共同事件(如飞机坠毁导致多人受伤)、正常和病态战斗压力、人口/单位考虑因素、医疗单位内不同角色的要求以及预期临床结果的多患者表现。以视频指南为补充的疾病脚本包括以时间为基础的疾病/受伤过程以及对不同典型治疗的规定反应。该系统在南加州大学医疗卫生学院的年度 MASCAL 演习("猛兽行动")期间进行了试点。临床教师被问及这一新系统的忠实性,而角色扮演者则被评估其可行性:结果:在 "布什马斯特行动 "中制作了 300 张与 49 种疾病脚本相关联的伤员卡,并对其进行了同行评审和试用。共有 170 名受过有限医学培训的军人利用新的伤员描述系统模拟了病人。临床教员强烈认为,改进后的伤员描绘系统提高了单个病人展示的真实性(96%)。83%的角色扮演者强烈认为伤员描绘系统易于理解:改进后的伤员描述系统是提高 MASCAL 演习真实性的可行方法。该系统已与全球各地的军事医疗单位共享,以协助他们开展 MASCAL 演习,从而使未来对该伤员描绘系统进行多地点评估成为可能。
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来源期刊
Military Medicine
Military Medicine MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
393
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Military Medicine is the official international journal of AMSUS. Articles published in the journal are peer-reviewed scientific papers, case reports, and editorials. The journal also publishes letters to the editor. The objective of the journal is to promote awareness of federal medicine by providing a forum for responsible discussion of common ideas and problems relevant to federal healthcare. Its mission is: To increase healthcare education by providing scientific and other information to its readers; to facilitate communication; and to offer a prestige publication for members’ writings.
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