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Posts Tagged ‘Medical Training’

Civilian Aeromedical Evacuation Sustainment Training

November 4th, 2011 MERI No comments

The University of Memphis (UM), Wright State University National Center for Medical Readiness (NCMR), and the Medical Education and Research Institute (MERI) has developed a training program to ensure effective interface between civilian and military operations in the event of a catastrophe requiring aeromedical evacuation. The civilian aeromedical evacuation sustainment (CAEST) training will complement existing military training and will prepare civilian nursing, allied health, public health, and emergency responder personnel to appropriately assess and prepare patients in pre-hospital austere environments and in hospital or other clinical patient collection sites for aeromedical evacuation. Going beyond traditional community first responder training and health system and community disaster management planning, we will address significant issues associated with operations and practice differences between civilian and military systems, such as communications, medical triage, and patient evacuation and transfer protocols and provide hands-on experiences via disaster exercises.

This medical readiness course is free to all healthcare providers, disaster management teams and hospital administrators both military and civilian.

The course is delivered at MERI both days. 8:00 am – 4:30 pm for the first day and 8:00 am – 12:30 pm on the second day. This is the link for registration website:

https://epay.wright.edu/C21810_ustores/web/store_main.jsp?STOREID=4&SINGLESTORE=true

Suggested Prerequisites: ICS 100 & ICS 200
http://www.fema.gov/emergency/nims/NIMSTrainingCourses.shtm

Dates for the Civilian Aeromedical Evacuation Sustainment Training (CAEST) are listed below:

Course dates for 2011:

  • December 6-7, 2011

Course Dates for 2012:

  • January 10-11, 2012
  • February 7-8, 2012
  • February 21-22, 2012
  • March 13-14, 2012
  • March 27-28, 2012
  • April 10-11, 2012
  • April 24-25, 2012

Please contact Shirley R. Brown, RN,MSN, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or 901-674-4560, for any questions.

Medical Impact: MERI moves to forefront for medical training

January 24th, 2011 SAgranov No comments

Courtesy of the Memphis Daily News, by Michael Waddell

The Medical Education & Research Institute has evolved into one of the elite medical training facilities in the country. The center’s list of faculty and students reads like a “Who’s Who” of medicine from all over the world.


Rebecca Brown, left, and Emily Cashman prepare the donor for a medical course in the anatomical lab at the Medical Education & Research Institute (MERI), a nonprofit medical teaching and training facility. MERI conducts state-of-the-art, hands-on educational courses for physicians from across the country and around the world. (Photo: Lance Murphey)

The nonprofit medical teaching and training school touts itself as a turn-key operation that is a one-stop shop for state-of-the-art, hands-on training using un-embalmed anatomic donors and human patient electronic simulators. The center has been open for 16 years and employs a staff of 44.

“It’s critical that physicians stay up to date,” said Diana Kelly, MERI manager of institutional development. “The more practice they get before surgery, the better for all of us.”

MERI educates 11,200 students from all medical specialties each year, plus another 4,000 people involved in the care process. Students include physicians, nurses, certified registered nurse anesthetists, EMS providers, respiratory therapists, health care professional students, pharmacists and physician assistants.

The center’s impact on the Memphis economy is substantial, with projections for 2011 to be $45 million brought into the area from physician’s visits and other MERI business. Donations to MERI in 2010 totaled approximately $1 million.

The facility features five stations equipped with the latest technology to replicate an ICU, an ER/Trauma, a general patient room, a labor and delivery room and OR suites. Researchers and students can experience more than 95 pre-developed customizable medical scenarios.

Several new human patient simulators were purchased at the end of last year thanks to a grant from The Assisi Foundation of Memphis Inc. MERI’s nine human patient simulators are able to cry and breathe; they have teeth, fingernails and bodily fluids; and their pupils even dilate. Each is wired to be voiced by someone from an outside control room.

“Working with the high-fidelity human patient simulators, we can establish everyday situations to practice intubations, trauma scenarios like car wrecks and disaster training,” Kelly said.

The simulation rooms are outfitted with AV equipment so training sessions can be recorded and then reviewed.

MERI works with 80 medical device companies, professional associations and societies. The center also supports students from the area’s three largest medical device companies: Medtronic Inc., Wright Medical Group Inc. and Smith & Nephew.

Partnerships with manufacturers like ImmersiveTouch and its virtual simulators will lead to the creation of three-dimensional models of patient anatomy and particular ailments. Working with the virtual simulators is designed to feel the same as performing real surgeries, and it also allows the surgeons to practice without exposure to radiation.


Shelby County Health Department workers take a course on patient tracking scanners at MERI, a nonprofit medical teaching and training facility. (Photo: Lance Murphey)

“Surgeons need time to practice with these devices,” said Elizabeth J. Ostric, MERI’s executive director. “The result is safer outcomes from surgical procedures, and we all benefit from that.”

Much of the center’s research and education is made possible by human donors. Genesis is the center’s willed body donor program for people that wish to donate their bodies for the advancement of science.

“Our donors enable the doctors to have real-world practice opportunities,” Ostric said. “It’s the donors’ final way to give one last thing back to their fellow human beings.”

More than 600 donors were received last year. Eighty percent of those donors came from Tennessee and the surrounding states, and 200 of the 600 donors had prior military experience. MERI has a morgue onsite, and they can keep as many as 300 donors at one time. The donors can be used for tests for between six months and one year.

MERI also conducts emergency preparedness training both at its facility on Cleveland Avenue and at 1381 Madison Ave. across the street, an older building that MERI bought in 2009. A recent training exercise involved Shelby County emergency responders getting a practice run through a bombing incident, with search and rescue, triage and anatomy sessions.

“It’s a great benefit for the community,” Kelly said. “This way, the entire county of first responders can work together, and it helps nurses and paramedics to communicate better as a team.”

The disaster training courses are funded by a $250,000 matching grant from the Plough Foundation and financial support from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Metropolitan Medical Response System Program.

Dr. Joe Holley has been conducting volunteer training sessions at MERI for more than two years. He is director of the Emergency Department at Baptist Memorial Hospital-Collierville and is the medical director of EMS for Tennessee. He is also medical director of the Tennessee Task Force One’s FEMA Urban Search and Rescue team.

“It’s a fabulous place to do training,” Holley said. “The MERI is very unique in the type of training it offers thanks to its excellent simulators, cadaver labs, mock ups and test rooms. Plus, they can take their entire show on the road. The capabilities are amazing.”

The center’s Mobile MERI unit includes a refrigerated vehicle that transports donors and equipment. It allows the center to provide courses and support off-site anywhere in the U.S. The unit can be set up in spaces like hotel ballrooms, convention centers or corporate headquarters.

MERI upgraded its conference facilities in 2010 by building a 50-seat auditorium and multipurpose room and installing a kitchen. The center’s conference area can now accommodate two separate groups with as many as 80 people.

MERI also contributed to the community last year by providing roughly $200,000 in “in-kind” training for local community organizations like the Church Health Center and local paramedics.

A Gift That Lasts for Years

July 13th, 2010 SAgranov No comments

Source: Commercial Appeal in response to Sunday Feature Article, A Lasting Legacy: Body-Donor Program Helps MERI Train Doctors in New Techniques.

“I was pleased to see the article regarding the Medical Education Research Institute. My mother was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer in June of 2004 and made the decision to donate her remains to benefit medical research.

Apprehensively I began to investigate existing opportunities in the Mid-South.

The representatives I spoke with at MERI were professional, informative and empathic.

Information regarding the program was hand delivered to my mother’s hospital room a few hours after my initial inquiry.

My mother passed away just a few days after making her final decision. MERI made a very painful time a little less traumatic.

Funds generous enough to cover the memorial costs, flowers, the minister’s fee and the vocalist were provided without delay.

Almost a year to the date of her death, I received a phone call advising me that the research had been complete and that her ashes would be available soon.

The family chose to have her ashes interned. They remain in the original resting place with an engraved name plate on a marble memorial at a local cemetery, all of which is provided at no charge to the family.

Several weeks later I received a letter explaining how my mother’s donation had benefited many medical professionals in several different areas of research.

I knew at that moment that my mother’s wishes had been honored and that her “gift” would benefit others for years to come.”

Jackie Mooneyham

Bartlett

Baptist Simulation Center Uses High-Tech Tools to Help Staff Learn

April 27th, 2010 SAgranov No comments

Source: Commercial Appeal
By Toby Sells
Posted April 27, 2010

Simulator

A package delivery driver was hit by a car last week. His heart stopped at the scene.

He was brought to Baptist Memorial Hospital-Memphis, where he was shocked back to life with a defibrillator. His condition finally stabilized, but he needed an overnight stay in the emergency room.

Sarah Eisenbacher monitors and controls SimMan 3G while nurse Ken Tate demonstrates the realistic respiration of the high-tech mannequin, which can mimic the symptoms of just about any ailment a human could have.Sarah Eisenbacher   monitors and controls SimMan 3G while nurse Ken Tate demonstrates the realistic respiration of the high-tech mannequin, which can mimic the symptoms of just about any ailment a human could have.

Most of that really didn’t happen. The patient’s job and the car accident were made up and the “patient” wasn’t a real person, but rather a pricey, high-tech simulator.

The defibrillator shocks, however, were very real — part of a training regimen designed to help medical professionals sharpen their skills.

The simulator, one of five at Baptist’s new Simulation Center, is a SimMan 3G mannequin, a completely wireless, life-sized human model designed to mimic the symptoms of just about any injury or ailment that would befall a real person.

The mannequins can cough, cry, vomit, blink, urinate, talk, sweat, show a pulse, respond to medications, have overdoses and seizures and do just about anything else a real patient can do.

The 3,600-square-foot Simulation Center, scheduled to open May 13, will have five patient rooms equipped to simulate nearly every patient service area in the hospital — childbirth, pediatrics, critical care, general medical and emergency.

The center was established with an $815,000 grant from the Baptist Foundation, with the rest funded by the hospital. The total cost of the project was not disclosed.

Everything about the center, besides the mannequins, is real, including the room size and the medical equipment and supplies. So, when Baptist’s new nurses are training or its veterans are sharpening their skills, they are not allowed to use the “p” word.

” ‘Pretend’ is a word we don’t use in here,” said Judy Bedard, Baptist’s director of staff development and a registered nurse. “We want you to simulate everything.”

Bedard said Baptist began training on mannequins in 2004, but that the new simulation center is a major step forward in that sort of training.

“There is just a lot of complexity now in just taking care of the basic situations and equipment and medications,” she said.

The Medical Education and Research Institute has been using simulators for two years, said Elizabeth Ostric, its executive director.

“We see how much (the simulators) help students at every level, whether you’re an experienced caregiver or one who is learning to become a caregiver,” Ostric said. “We see that allowing people to demonstrate their competence increases their confidence.”

The institute teaches simulated courses on advanced life support, restricted airways and many courses for paramedics in Shelby County.

Baptist’s Bedard said simulators have been around for about 10 years and have been used for years by the military and in academia, but have just recently caught on in hospital settings.

She said each of the hospital’s new high-tech mannequins cost about $65,000.

“But what they provide in the learning environment, they’re worth much more than that,” she said.

MemphisConnect Highlights MERI’s Disaster Training Course

March 5th, 2010 SAgranov No comments

A big Thank You goes out to Elizabeth Lemmonds, Director of Communications and Marketing from The Leadership Academy, for writing such a great article featuring the MERI and the disaster training for EMS and Firefighter we’ve begun hosting.

A fog machine adds to the realism of this disaster scenario.

Memphis’ own Medical Education and Research Institute (MERI) is launching disaster training for EMTs and paramedics in the greater Memphis area. Another strong testament to our local medical industry: our community’s emergency workers will be armed with leading edge disaster preparedness, thanks to a first-of-its kind training and research school:

The Medical Education and Research Institute announced the launch of EMS disaster training courses which will be offered to paramedics and EMTs throughout Memphis, Shelby County and its municipalities on six separate dates: The first course will be held on December 17, 2009 with the balance to follow in the first quarter of 2010.

The full-day courses will focus on applying emergency medical techniques and procedures in disaster situations as it relates to treatment of injuries including victims of a simulated office complex bombing. The courses will also focus on search and rescue and triage of simulated victims during the disaster. The course will be taught by experts in the field of emergency medicine and disaster preparedness.

Actual disaster situations are simulated, like a body trapped in rubble.

“We feel that this is invaluable simulation training to offer to the Memphis and Shelby County Paramedics and EMTs, and we hope that it will be beneficial to the community in disaster relief and preparedness,” Diana Kelly, MERI Manager Institutional Development, said.

The new EMS disaster training courses are available in part as a result of a matching grant given to the MERI by the Plough Foundation to train paramedics and EMTs in Memphis, Shelby County and its municipalities. Partnering with this effort is the Department of Homeland Security Metropolitan Medical Response System Program administered through the Memphis Division of Fire Services that will also aid in funding the project.

Trainees will respond to lifelike injuries like burns and amputations.

Simulation training at the MERI was made possible by a $1 million grant from the Assisi Foundation, which funded the space, human patient simulators, and tools for the MERI Medical Simulation Center.

About the MERI The Medical Education & Research Institute (MERI) is a non-profit medical teaching and training school in Memphis, Tennessee, that conducts state-of-the-art, hands-on educational courses for physicians and other medical personnel from across the country and around the world. A first-of-its kind training and research school, the MERI’s use of un-embalmed anatomical donors and human patient simulators, offers physicians, nurses, nurse anesthetists, paramedics, EMTs and other healthcare professionals a unique, invaluable and authentic operating room training experience in which new techniques, technologies and devices perform just as they would on a living patient. Inspired in 1992 by Memphis neurosurgeon Kevin Foley, today the MERI educates more than 9,600 students each year from all 50 states and more than 27 countries from around the world.