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[P] Critical Crisis Thinking – Module 1 – Accidents, Emergencies, Disaster, Crises Attached are three papers that are related to this module. Please download and read all three papers, and choose one to write a publication review of. Guidelines for writing a Publication Review – These guidelines are designed to support Fellowship Programme participants who have undertaken to write a publication review 1. Preliminary information Full reference, Title in full, author, date of publication, place, publisher and ISBN 2. Introduction State the topic of the publication and its general thesis to give the reader a context for the publication. This could cover the main themes of the publication, and give an overview as to the general subject matter. 3. Development This section should outline how the author develops these key themes and what the reviewer has learned from them. Publication authors’ arguments have to me made clear before your own reviewing, criticizing or evaluation is attempted. Your arguments have to be supported by relevant literature, quotes from publication or your own experience. At this point you should state whether or not you agree or disagree with the authors, and if you found it useful in your reflection on the development of arguments in your own practice area. It is important to show that you understand the content of the article and that you have engaged with it to think critically about your own viewpoints. Furthermore, if you have identified any gaps in authors’ handling or analysis of the topic, please indicate your view point in this section. 4. Conclusion This should sum up the main points from the previous section and should include but not limited to: Summary of your assessment of the material Reflections on the extent the publication contributed to your own understanding of the topic Importance of the topic to healthcare quality and safety. Word count for Publication review: 500-750 words and two relevant quotes from the text Learning Aims: Critical thinking, comprehension and evaluation skills, academic writing ——-—- [R] Reflection: Critical Crisis Thinking – Module 1 – Accidents, Emergencies, Disaster, Crises Please provide a personal reflection detailing what you have learned from completing this module. Please download the questions by clicking on the ‘Download Files’ button below. Please upload your reflection as a Word document only. Recommended Reading List 1. McIntosh,J., Jacques, C., Mitrani-Reiser, J., Kirsch, T., Giovinazzi, S., Wilson, T., (2012) “The impact of the 22nd February 2011 Earthquake on Christchurch Hospital”. New Zealand Society for Earthquake Engineering (NZSEE) conference proceedings, Christchurch, New Zealand. 2. Richardson, S., Ardagh, M., (2013), “Innovations and lessons learned from the Canterbury earthquakes”. Disaster prevention and Management, 22 (5), pp. 405-414. 3. West, M., Eckert, R., Steward, K.,Passmore, B (2014).,Developing Collective Leadership for Healthcare. Kings Fund, London. 4. Ardagh, M., Deely, (2018) “Rising from the rubble.” Canterbury University Press 5. Zhuravsky, L “When Disaster Strikes: Sustained Resilience Performance in an Acute Clinical Setting” In: Hollnagel, E., Wears, B., Braithwaite,J., (Eds.) Delivering Resilient Health Care, 2019, Routledge. 6. Introduction to Emergency Management (Paperback) 7th edition (2020), Haddow, George D., Coppola, Damon P., Bullock, Jane A., ISBN: 978-0-12-817139-4, Buttlerworth-Neinemann (Elsevier) 7. Critical Thinking in Crisis Management, Mark Leigh, Emergency Planning College Occasional Papers, New Series, Number 15, August 2016, Available at: /help-library/critical-thinking-in-crisis-management