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Original Article

SJEMed. 2024; 5(2): 101-109


An innovative curriculum development experience: Emergency Medical Dispatch role in the Healthcare Transformation Vision of Saudi Arabia

Yousef M. Alsofayan, Kharsan M. Almakhalas, Abdullah A. Alabdali, Mohammed S. Arafat, Nawfal A. Aljerian, Ameera A. Cluntun, Waad S. Alshammari, Salman S. Alharthi, Fahad S. Alhajjaj, Jalal M. Alowais, Sami J. Alsolamy, Bandr Y. Mzahim, Abdulrahman Y. Sabbagh.




Abstract

Background
Healthcare medical dispatch systems play a fundamental role in the daily operations of prehospital services. This includes facilitating the interpretation of various dispatch-related systems, receiving incident calls, categorizing cases, guiding proper resources deployment, and providing proper instructions before the arrival of healthcare providers. Considering the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s (KSA’s) health sector transformation plan as part of Vision 2030, developing an Emergency Medical Dispatch (EMD) Program as part of essential prehospital services will allow rapid and competent healthcare delivery. In this study, our purpose is to describe the curriculum development of the EMD Program to improve the training of dispatchers and to share the experience in the interest of better prehospital dispatch systems.
Methods
A selected group of education experts and academics in emergency medical services dispatch were assigned to develop an EMD curriculum over six months. This study aims to describe the approach followed in developing an innovative EMD Program to share the experience and ultimately standardize dispatch-related training programs. The data of this study was collected by reviewing approved documents of the EMD Program including program curriculum, syllabus, logbook, and exam blueprint after approval letters were received from the Health Academy, Saudi Commission for Health Specialties.
Results
The development of the EMD program utilized a consecutive mixed approach starting with a competency-based with backward design method to ensure the achievement of targeted outcomes followed by the Kern Six-step curriculum development model, namely: (1) problem identification and general need assessment; (2) targeted need assessment; (3) goals and objectives; (4) educational strategies; (5) implementation; and (6) evaluation and feedback. This resulted in four comprehensive modules and seventeen competencies in interpreting various dispatch systems, prioritizing incidents, deploying proper resources, and providing pre-arrival instructions throughout the fourteen-week EMD Program.
Conclusion
As part of the health sector transformation plan in KSA, EMD services play a fundamental role in the daily operations of prehospital healthcare services. Developing an EMD Program with a consecutive mixed approach might improve the current operations of EMD services.

Key words: Dispatch, Curriculum, Saudi Arabia, Healthcare Transformation, Vision 2030.






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