27 March 2024
Among the simulated casualties covered in blood and screaming in pain were paramedic students from QUT (Queensland University of Technology), who’d volunteered their time and bodies to help train 2 Health Brigade medics.
The art of moulage was applied by make-up artists within the 2nd Health Battalion, who diligently applied fake blood to wounds created from modelling wax.
Second-year paramedic Emma Nikotemo jumped at the chance to role-play, having a simulated gunshot wound and compound fracture.
“The medics showed great care and communication and were very thorough with their checks. That’s something I’m taking away with me,” she said.
Observer mentors with high-level experience in the civilian clinical system were used to oversee clinical scenarios and provide mentorship and detailed feedback to the training audience.
They controlled the role-play, directing casualties to respond and act according to injury.
The mentors followed a casualty run sheet that provided patient observations to create realistic challenges for clinicians.
This included Army medic Corporal Jonathon Todd, a part-time soldier who works for the Queensland Ambulance Service.
“I’ve guided activities like this before, but this one is a lot higher fidelity with more complex patients and logistical aspects behind it, which is not frequently practised,” he said.
Mentors provided feedback and their own experiences to the exercising clinicians on alternative treatment pathways, competence of clinicians and enthusiasm levels.
Director of Clinical Services Lieutenant Colonel Julian Williams, an emergency doctor at Royal Brisbane Hospital, was briefed by observers each day.
He said the best way to test a health system was to expose people, procedures and equipment to high-fidelity simulations.
“The way to overcome simulation fatigue is to use the equipment – we’re opening real drugs, drawing them up in syringes; this all contributes to the realism of the simulations,” Lieutenant Colonel Williams said.