Impact of virtual disaster collaboration exercises on disaster leadership at hospitals in Saudi Arabia
This study measured the impact of virtual three-level collaboration (3LC) exercises on participants’ perceived levels of collaboration, learning, and utility (CLU) at hospitals in the southern region of Saudi Arabia. The 3LC exercise is a tabletop training tool used to facilitate disaster education and document CLU. This model enables the practitioner to acquire new knowledge and promotes active learning. An English version of the CLU scale, the validated Swedish survey tool, was applied to 100 healthcare managers or leaders in various positions at both the operational and tactical levels after conducting the 3LC exercises.
This study confirms the feasibility of three level collaboration exercises conducted virtually. The work presented also demonstrates that learning depends on collaboration practices and that collaboration exercises before crises can help to build qualities that people can apply in daily life. Collaboration elements exercised in this study contributed to perceived learning. There was a strong covariation between participation in the participants’ collaboration exercises and perceived learning and utility. The virtual three level collaboration exercises were well-received by the participants and achieved an acceptable collaboration, learning, and utility score. The results of this study open up the possibility of remote education in disaster management, at least from an organizational perspective, in a world with an increasing number of disasters and public health emergencies.