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Upcoming Satellite Broadcast:
Alternative Standards of Care in Disasters
March 26, 2009
12:00 - 1:30 p.m. (Central Time)
Emergency events require a population to adapt quickly to changing circumstances including an often limited scope of public health services. In such instances, alternative standards of care allow medical personnel to streamline and simplify the support process to preserve lives. Planning for emergencies requires incorporating alternative standards into the public health system, which involves utilizing the best combination of current technology and available resources to create a robust and reliable outcome. Prevention based management and broad based community planning across the wide range of interests and potentially responding agencies, is a critical step in establishing the plans and preparation needed to effectively execute alternative standards of care. This program will examine these issues in the context of the principle priority for American consequence management in disaster, the preservation of human life.

Upcoming Workshop:
Burn
Evaluation and Care for Emergency Responders Course
Lincoln, AL - Friday, March 13, 2009
Huntsville, AL - Monday, March 16, 2009
*For registration and a full list of dates and locations
please
click here
This 8 hour course is intended for first responders and receivers
including firefighters, emergency medical personnel, and nurses who
would be the first to treat burn victims. The Burn Evaluation
and Care for Emergency Responders Course, adapted from the American
Burn Association materials and trainings, introduces information
relevant to the care of casualties from burn injuries.
For more information
please contact Michael Poole at the UAB School of Public Health (Phone: (205)
934-7735; Email:
mepoole@uab.edu)
New
Online Courses Available:
Productive Communication Skills
This course is designed to provide you with the communication skills you will need to help you take the next step in your organization. After taking this course, you will be able to reach a positive outcome with those you supervise by understanding personal communication style differences, using turn-taking effectively, noticing facial expressions which may signal emotions, and maintaining an appropriate body posture when communicating. You will learn the preferred pace of the different styles, and how styles shift under stress. You will learn how to increase your productivity by identifying high payoff activities, handling conflicting priorities, and using your most productive time of day to your advantage. You will learn how to deal with difficult people by improving your listening skills and becoming a more persuasive person.

Special Needs
Populations in Disaster Response
This
course will discuss the basic principles which should underlie
disaster consequence management, planning and appropriate actions
within the action phases of disaster response. It will focus
on the saving of life and mitigation of injury for victims with
special needs and vulnerabilities. The discussion will examine
how culture and religion are population characteristics which may be
usefully considered in the context of special needs when designing
and executing consequence management activities during a crisis.
The
discussion will assist in identifying vulnerable populations in a
community at risk and assess significant requirements and challenges
inherent in their time-phased emergency support. It will
examine the tools required for lifesaving as well as those needed
for broader consequence management which can be confidently
employed. It will also discuss the most effective manners of
use for these tools.

Two Years
Later: Continued Psychological Difficulties of First Responders and the Affected
General Population
This
course examines the continued psychological and adjustment issues in
the population affected by Hurricane Katrina. The impact of
the disaster on the first responders to Katrina is also discussed.
The discussion is based on the current research regarding the
present psychological status and personal experience of those
affected by the hurricane. NOTE: This course was
originally delivered as a satellite broadcast.

Understanding
and Responding to the Needs of Children After Large-Scale Disasters
As communities across the country
are planning and preparing their response to large-scale disasters
(natural, chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, explosive),
special attention needs to be paid to populations considered at
high-risk for negative consequences. One of the highest risk
groups is children. By understanding the emotional needs of
children in the face of these traumatic events, preparations can be
made that will improve outcomes and promote resilience.
Disasters can leave children
feeling frightened, confused, and insecure. Whether a child
has personally experienced trauma, has merely seen the event on
television, or has heard it discussed by adults, it is important
that healthcare professionals be informed and ready to help if
reactions to stress begin to occur.
Children may respond to disasters
by demonstrating fears, sadness, or behavioral problems.
Younger children may return to earlier behavior patterns, such as
bedwetting, sleep problems, and separation anxiety. Older
children may also display anger, aggression, school problems, or
withdrawal. Some children who have only indirect contact with
the disaster but witness it on television may develop distress.
This course will describe how
children may respond to traumatic events, with a focus on CBRNE
incidents. Ideas for interventions, including a new model of
Psychological First Aid will be presented. Finally,
recommendations for preparation considerations will be explored.
NOTE: This course was originally delivered as a satellite
broadcast.

Workshop In-Depth:

According to United States Fire Administration 2007 data, fire killed more Americans than all natural disasters combined. Approximately 10,000 people in the United States die every year because of infections that complicate burns. In an effort to contribute to improved response and overall outcomes for victims of fires, the University of Alabama at Birmingham's South Central Center for Public health Preparedness is providing 6 Burn Evaluation and Care for Emergency Responders courses in the state of Alabama in 2009. Developed by Dr. Ziad Kazzi of Emory University's Department of Emergency Medicine and Dr. James Cross of the University of Alabama at Birmingham's Burn Center, this one-day course introduces information relevant to the care of casualties from burn injuries.
While burn injuries are common in the United States, specialized burn centers often lack the capability to care for large numbers of burn victims. For this reason, improved initial evaluation, triage and management of burn injuries can significantly impact victim outcomes. These tasks are most commonly performed by emergency responders and first receivers (paramedics, nurses and physicians). This course will raise the overall burn care expertise among participants and prepare these individuals to respond to public health threats and burn related emergencies.
Material covers burns sustained from exposure to electrical current, caustic chemicals, sulfur mustard and radiological sources. Also included is a table top exercise that involves a practical session in which participants evaluate and design a management plan for a mannequin accompanied by a clinical scenario. There are two courses scheduled for March 2009. Registration is accessible from the link under Upcoming Workshops.
Other Training Opportunities:
Preparedness Minute Video
Preparedness Minutes are video clips describing actions to take in
emergency situations, whether they are at work or at home.
Some of the videos will be reminders, others will present new
information. Ultimately these videos will help you be prepared
for an emergency or disaster. Below is the link to our latest
clip on administering psychological first aid.
Watch Video
Third Public
Health Certificate Program Has Launched
The
South Central Public Health Partnership (SCPHP) is pleased to
announce the launch of its third online certificate program in
public health. The SCPHP certificate program provides a certificate
of completion upon completion of all courses in a particular subject
or focus area. The third series in the SCPHP certificate program is
Bioterrorism Preparedness. There are 5 courses required for this
program. This certificate program includes courses that provide
training in bioterrorism preparedness and understanding the public
health threat. Emergency providers that will be responding to
bioterrorism events are also one of the focuses of this program.
Course titles will be shown once you enroll to the certificate
program. The Partnership is excited about this newest addition to
our online training programs. For more information on how to
register for the new certificate program, go to the
user manual
**Note: Certificates of completion will be mailed once a
month to individuals based on the address listed in the SCPHP
Learning Management System. Enrollees in the certificate program are
advised to check their address under Profile.
Disaster Management Program
A
new program in Disaster Management is being offered by Tulane School
of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Department of Environmental
Health Sciences. This program is offered both on campus and by
distance learning through the Center for Applied Environmental
Public Health (CAEPH). Students may obtain either a graduate
certificate or the full MPH in disaster management. The Tulane
CAEPH distance learning programs are geared to mid career
professionals. CAEPH uses state-of-the-art synchronous
distance learning technologies to enhance learning and networking.
For more information, contact Albert Terrillion at
DLinfo@tulane.edu or at
1-800-862-2122.
Other Online Courses Available:
Continuity of
Operations Planning
The purpose of this course is to understand the management issues in
disaster and its outcomes through examining the crisis cycle
involved in risk audit, mitigation, preparedness planning, impact of
the crisis event, response and recovery. Exercises and
discussion will be incorporated as part of the discussion of each of
the crisis phases.

Mass Casualty
Medical Command
This course is intended for pre-hospital care providers who may be
called on to respond to a mass casualty incident when large numbers
of victims are injured or exposed to a natural or man made disaster,
including the intentional attack on people using a CBRNE agent.
The Incident Command System (ICS) including the use of unified
command function will be followed to better prepare trainees how to
respond with maximum effectiveness and establish medical command at
a mass casualty event involving a single command structure or
multi-agency/multi-jurisdictional response.

Quick
Links:
Register
Now!
South
Central Public Health Partnership
Tulane
University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine
University
of Alabama at Birmingham School of Public Health

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