Instruments for the assessment of disaster management among healthcare professionals: a scoping review
Author | Elshami, Sara |
Author | Yakti, Ola |
Author | Mohamed Ibrahim, Mohamed Izham |
Author | Awaisu, Ahmed |
Author | Sherbash, Mohamed |
Author | Mukhalalati, Banan |
Available date | 2025-06-19T11:21:49Z |
Publication Date | 2025-04-11 |
Publication Name | Frontiers in Public Health |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2025.1540743 |
Citation | Elshami, S., Yakti, O., Mohamed Ibrahim, M. I., Awaisu, A., Sherbash, M., & Mukhalalati, B. (2025). Instruments for the assessment of disaster management among healthcare professionals: a scoping review. Frontiers in Public Health, 13, 1540743. |
Abstract | Objectives: The recent disasters have highlighted the importance of healthcare professionals (HCPs) in aiding communities and maintaining consistent services, prompting a global reconsideration of disaster preparedness approaches. This scoping review aimed to identify and evaluate the psychometric properties of the available instruments that measure disaster preparedness and readiness among HCPs. Methods: A scoping review was conducted using five concepts: disasters, health personnel, preparedness, management, and questionnaire. Three databases were searched for studies published in English. The identified instruments were summarized according to disaster type, disaster management phase, measurement scope/context, and healthcare discipline. The psychometric properties were evaluated according to content validity, response process, internal structure, relation to other variables, and consequences. Results: The Emergency Preparedness Information Questionnaire (EPIQ) was the most commonly used instrument, while the Provider Response to Emergency Pandemic (PREP) and the Korean version of the Disaster Preparedness Evaluation Tool (DPET) were the most valid instruments. Most instruments have undergone limited psychometric evaluations, primarily focusing on content and internal structure validations, with response process, relation to other variables, and consequences not frequently reported. Conclusion: The review highlights the lack of well-developed assessment instruments for disaster preparedness in healthcare disciplines, highlighting the need for future research to develop and thoroughly validate such instruments. Systematic review registration: https://www.researchregistry.com/browse-the-registry#registryofsystematicreviewsmeta-analyses/registryofsystematicreviewsmeta-analysesdetails/638dbba71e82b30021c02680/. |
Sponsor | This work received financial support for the research and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by the Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF), Early Career Researcher Award (ECRA): ECRA03-001-3-001. Open Access funding provided by QU Health, Qatar University. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Frontiers Media S.A. |
Subject | assessment instruments disaster management healthcare professionals reliability validity |
Type | Article |
Volume Number | 13 |
ESSN | 2296-2565 |
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Pharmacy Research [1426 items ]