Founders of National Disaster Life Support courses honored with public service award

AUGUSTA, Ga. – The group who developed the National Disaster Life Support Courses, which prepare health care professionals and emergency response personnel for mass casualty events, has been honored with the Ron J. Anderson Public Service Award from the Eagles Coalition, a consortium of United States Major Metropolitan 911 System Medical Directors.

The national award, named for the longtime Parkland Health and Hospital System president and CEO and public health advocate, recognizes those who have implemented effective systems of care, education and science in emergency medical services and disaster response.

The honorees were Drs. Richard Schwartz and Phillip Coule, from the Department of Emergency Medicine and Hospitalist Services at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University; Drs. Paul Pepe and Ray Swienton, from the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Texas Southwest Medical Center; Dr. Cham Dallas, of the University of Georgia’s College of Public Health; and Dr. Scott Lillibridge, of the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the Texas A&M Health Science Center (formerly of the University of Texas Sciences Center in Houston).

The early courses were an outgrowth of the 1996 Atlanta Olympics bombing, when it became apparent that responding agencies were often trained differently. After 9/11, when the need for these types of courses became a national priority, the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services gave members of the prospective NDLS team a directive to develop standardized courses that could be widely disseminated among military, federal and civilian responders.

The result was a group of courses designed to optimally prepare  a wide array of providers – from police to paramedics to physicians, hospital administrators and firefighters – to work together seamlessly in the aftermath of natural or human-made disasters. The overarching goal was to give all types of responders a common knowledge base and jargon and to eliminate ambiguity while also facilitating the best care for victims.

The program includes a Core Disaster Life Support Course® (CDLS) that gives hospital-based and frontline medical providers the essentials of natural and human-made disaster management. Basic Disaster Life Support (BDLS) and Advanced Disaster Life Support (ADLS) courses offer progressively more hands-on training and knowledge, like how and when to use high-level protective gear.

The nonprofit National Disaster Life Support Foundation was established in 2004 to steward the program when it began a partnership with the American Medical Association to widely disseminate the programs across the medical community and has now partnered with the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP).

Today, there are about 90 domestic training sites, and courses have been taught in 49 states and in more than 22 foreign countries. There are training sites in 11 countries, including places like Mexico, Japan, India, Saudi Arabia and now China. More than 130,000 health care professionals have been trained, and a growing number of health professional schools have added the program to their curriculum. The courses are now recognized by many organizations as the gold standard for training health professionals in disaster medical response and all-hazards preparedness.

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Written by
Jennifer Hilliard Scott

Jennifer Hilliard Scott is Director of Communications at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University. Contact her to schedule an interview on this topic or with one of our experts at 706-721-8604 or jscott1@augusta.edu.

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Woman smiling Written by Jennifer Hilliard Scott

Jagwire is your source for news and stories from Augusta University. Daily updates highlight the many ways students, faculty, staff, researchers and clinicians "bring their A games" in classrooms and clinics on four campuses in Augusta and locations across the state of Georgia.

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