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Disaster Med Public Health Prep · Aug 2013
Competency-based standardized training for humanitarian providers: making humanitarian assistance a professional discipline.
- Kirsten Johnson, Leanne Idzerda, Rachel Baras, Jessica Camburn, Karen Hein, Peter Walker, and Frederick M Burkle.
- Department of Family Medicine, McGill University, Montreal Canada.
- Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2013 Aug 1; 7 (4): 369-72.
AbstractThe number of people employed in international humanitarian care is growing at a yearly rate of 6%. The demand for better coordination, accountability, and training has led to a need for standardized humanitarian training programs for providers. Training should be based on comprehensive core competencies that providers must demonstrate in addition to their skill-specific competencies. This report explores the competencies specific to humanitarian training that are practice- and application-oriented, teachable, and measurable. Competency-based, standardized programs will be used to select humanitarian workers deployed in future crises and to guide the professionalization of this discipline.
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