University Of Louisville Public Health Preparedness Resources
Presented by the University of Louisville Center for Health Hazards Preparedness & School of Public Health and Information Sciences
The Following Items Are Offered As Resources Only - No
Continuing Education Credit Is Available.
I. DR.
NICHOLAS
MOSCA INTERVIEW
Dr.
Mosca has a vast amount of knowledge about preparedness and recovery as he was
the director of Oral Health Missions in Mississippi in the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina. Dr. Mosca shares his experiences and lessons he learned in
the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in this online video interview.
Click Here For
Interview
If You Click On The Above Link And
The Video Does Not Play, Click Here
II. MOULAGE VIDEO
This video discusses the basics of moulage
application, which is a sophisticated theatrical makeup to simulate
characteristics of a disease. Through the use of moulage and standardized
patients, the Center for Health Hazards Preparedness creates highly realistic
scenarios involving the clinical presentation of infection with biothreat agents
such as smallpox and anthrax.
Standardized patients are actors who learn
to assume all physical and psychological aspects of the patient being simulated:
not only the history, but also the body language, physical findings, and
emotional and personality traits. Using the information presented here you will
be able to bring reality to training exercises and drills to enhance our
Nation's public health preparedness.
Click Here For
Video
If You Click On The Above Link And The
Video Does Not Play, Click Here
III. COUGH SIMULATION VIDEO
Understanding how infections are transmitted enables
the healthcare worker to initiate protective measures. Using a human patient
simulator, we have developed a method that visually demonstrates respiratory
particles that are dispersed during a human cough. Using this as a training
tool, a mental picture is provided for the healthcare personnel.
By
seeing the personal and environmental contamination that occurs during a human
cough, the healthcare worker is better prepared to make decisions that can
protect them, others in the healthcare environment, and others within their
community.
Click
Here For Video
If You Click On The Above Link
And The Video Does Not Play, Click Here
IV. ENVIRONMENTAL HYGIENE VIDEO
Maintaining a hygienic environment within a
healthcare facility is a challenge that faces all healthcare personnel. Ensuring
that the risk of environmental contaminated is appreciated everyone in the
environment helps make its cleanliness a job that can be embraced by all levels
of personnel.
Using techniques that visually demonstrate environmental
contamination enables the viewer to capture impressive mental images. In
addition, techniques are described that enable personnel responsible for
environmental cleanliness to evaluate the effectiveness of their work as we
continue to make patient safety our top priority.
Click Here For
Video
If You Click On The Above Link And The
Video Does Not Play, Click Here
V. DR. GERALD GRANT INTERVIEW
During
his six month service in Iraq, Dr. Gerald Grant, an officer and neurosurgeon in
the U.S. Air Force and clinical faculty in the Department of Neurosurgery at the
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, managed neurological
trauma as well as blast traumas and general surgical practice. Dr. Grant shares
his battlefield experiences and real-life application of mass casualty triage in
this online video interview.
Click
Here For Interview
If You Click On The Above
Link And The Video Does Not Play, Click Here
ISSUES
PLAYING
VIDEO
You must have Windows Media Player 10.0 or higher to
view the lecture. You may be unable to view the lecture using an older version
of Windows Media Player. Most computers already have this program installed. If
yours does not, you can download and install it for free by clicking here.
Clicking on the lecture link should
cause Windows Media Player to open on your computer; the lecture should then
load and begin playing automatically.
If you click on the link and this
does not happen, open Windows Media Player yourself by going to the start menu
on your computer and clicking on the Windows Media Player icon.
Once
Windows Media Player opens, go to "file" then "open url" and cut and paste in
the appropriate address:
Dr. Mosca: http://louisville.edu/television/SPHIS/Mosca.Interview.asx
Moulage:
http://louisville.edu/television/SPHIS/Moulage.asx
Cough
Simulation: http://louisville.edu/television/cough.asx
Environmental
Hygiene: http://louisville.edu/television/Environmental.asx
Dr.
Grant: http://louisville.edu/television/SPHIS/Grant.Interview.Full.Version.asx
Click
ok and the lecture should begin playing.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
These free resources are sponsored by
University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences and
the Center for Health Hazards Preparedness (formerly the Center for Deterrence
of Biowarfare and Bioterrorism).
Funding support provided by
Bioterrorism and Curriculum Development Program, Health Resources and Services Administration
(HRSA), and the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC).
COPYRIGHT
All materials on these webpages are
Copyright © 2007 University of Louisville. This material may be reproduced or
redistributed for educational purposes, provided that the University of
Louisville is acknowledged as the author and copyright holder and the material's
website of origin, http://www.chse.louisville.edu/disasterprepcourses.html,
is listed. If you have any questions, please contact us at chse@louisville.edu.
MORE INFORMATION
For
more information about the UofL Center for Health Hazard Preparedness, click here.

