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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 July 2023
In 2018 Sierra Leone, a country highly prone to disasters, launched its first National Emergency Medical Service (NEMS) aiming to strengthen the provision of essential health services to the population with the long-term goal of creating a resilient health system able to effectively respond to and recover from emergencies. The Center for Research and Training in Disaster Medicine, Humanitarian Aid, and Global Health (CRIMEDIM), together with the Italian NGO Doctors with Africa (CUAMM), under the supervision of the Ministry of Health and Sanitation (MoHS), developed a prehospital Disaster Training Package (DTP) delivered to all NEMS personnel to boost the prehospital management of mass-casualty incidents (MCIs) and outbreaks.
The DTP was designed following the six-step approach to curriculum and training development with the ultimate goal of creating a workforce comprising qualified emergency responders with specific professional competencies to respond to outbreaks and MCIs. The DTP included a first phase in which NEMS local trainers underwent a training-of-trainers (ToT) course, enabling them to deliver cascade trainings to 16 district ambulance supervisors, 441 paramedics, 441 ambulance drivers, and 36 operators working in the NEMS operation center.
Starting on July 19, 2021, the ToT course was delivered to the seven national trainers. All trainers successfully passed the final examination and achieved high scores in the practical sessions, demonstrating active participation, commitment to the project, and good awareness. Following the ToT course, the series of cascade trainings started on August 2, 2021, delivered by the just-trained national trainers under the direct supervision of the two training managers.
The NEMS’ DTP is the very first Disaster Medicine training course delivered to prehospital healthcare providers in Sierra Leone. The authors believe that the provision of the DTP to all NEMS personnel has the potential to improve Disaster Medicine culture among health professionals in the Country.