A disaster is a high-stakes, low-frequency event that health care providers need to be prepared for at a moment's notice. Disaster readiness is an expected essential competency for new graduates and nurses in practice. 1 Throughout the history of disasters, nurses have been involved in each phase of disaster management, including mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery. 2 The impact of climate change, global terrorism, growing domestic civil unrest, and the emergence of new infectious disease pandemics suggests that the burden of caring for victims of disasters will continue to increase for health care systems. 3 The ability of the United States to appropriately respond to any disaster or public health emergency depends on the knowledge and skills of a national nursing workforce that can mobilize promptly. 4 The COVID-19 pandemic further highlighted the need for coordinated and efficient disaster response.The foundation of an effective disaster response starts in nursing education, making these skills critical components to incorporate into the curriculum. A tabletop simulation training strategy is an interactive, low-stress, no-fault strategy in which students have an assigned role and use their knowledge to solve problems. 5 This strategy provides nursing students with a classroom-based clinical experience that allows them to work through a problem instead of simply hearing and talking about it. Study results have indicated that tabletop exercises designed for senior nursing students provided good knowledge transfer from fundamental nursing courses to novel situations and promoted evidence-based judgments and critical thinking. 6 This finding emphasizes the significance of providing nursing students with realistic experiences that will better prepare them for clinical practice and potential mass casualty incidents after graduation.
Conceptual FrameworkKolb's Experiential Learning Theory was the conceptual framework used to support tabletop simulation training as an effective learning strategy in nursing education. The theory consists of a 4-part learning cycle: concrete