Knowledge levels and training needs of disaster medicine among health professionals, medical students, and local residents in Shanghai, China

Disaster is a serious public health issue. Health professionals and community residents are main players in disaster responses but their knowledge levels of disaster medicine are not readily available. This study aimed to evaluate knowledge levels and training needs of disaster medicine among potent...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2013-06, Vol.8 (6), p.e67041-e67041
Hauptverfasser: Su, Tong, Han, Xue, Chen, Fei, Du, Yan, Zhang, Hongwei, Yin, Jianhua, Tan, Xiaojie, Chang, Wenjun, Ding, Yibo, Han, Yifang, Cao, Guangwen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Disaster is a serious public health issue. Health professionals and community residents are main players in disaster responses but their knowledge levels of disaster medicine are not readily available. This study aimed to evaluate knowledge levels and training needs of disaster medicine among potential disaster responders and presented a necessity to popularize disaster medicine education. A self-reporting questionnaire survey on knowledge level and training needs of disaster medicine was conducted in Shanghai, China, in 2012. A total of randomly selected 547 health professionals, 456 medical students, and 1,526 local residents provided intact information. The total response rate was 93.7%. Overall, 1.3% of these participants have received systematic disaster medicine training. News media (87.1%) was the most common channel to acquire disaster medicine knowledge. Although health professionals were more knowledgeable than community residents, their knowledge structure of disaster medicine was not intact. Medical teachers were more knowledgeable than medical practitioners and health administrators (p = 0.002). Clinicians performed better than public health physicians (p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0067041