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New England Society for Health Care Material Management

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New England Society for Health Care Material Management Preparing for Pandemic Surge March 22, 2006 New England Society for Health Care Material Management Robert P ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New England Society for Health Care Material Management


1
New England Society for Health Care Material
Management
  • Preparing for Pandemic Surge
  • March 22, 2006

2
New England Society for Health Care Material
Management
  • Robert P. Paone, B.S., Pharm. D.
  • Statewide Strategic National Stockpile
    Coordinator
  • Center for Emergency Preparedness
  • Massachusetts Department of Public Health
  • (508) 820-2011 (desk)
  • (617) 438-8249 (cell)
  • Robert.paone_at_state.ma.us

3
Objectives
  • Review current impact projections of a Pandemic
    Flu in Massachusetts
  • Describe Pandemic Response Plans at state and
    local levels
  • Discuss surge preparations

4
Potential Impact of Next Pandemic In
Massachusetts Planning Assumptions
  • Outbreaks will occur simultaneously throughout
    the US
  • Up to 40 absenteeism in all sectors at all
    levels
  • Order and security disrupted for several months,
    not just hours or days

5
Pandemic v. Usual Surge Event
  • Likely to happen across Commonwealth and affect
    all regions simultaneously
  • Expected to occur in at least 2 waves of
    approximately 8 weeks duration each
  • Projected numbers are spread across the wave,
    with a peak occurring mid-wave
  • High attack rate among healthcare workers

6
Example of an Epidemic Curve
7
MDPH FLU SURGE ASSUMPTIONS
  • Attack rate 30
  • Hospitalization rate 4 of ill
  • Death rate 1 of ill
  • Duration of epidemic wave 8 weeks
  • Avg. length of non-ICU stay for flu related
    illness 5 days
  • Avg. length of ICU stay for flu related illness
    10 days
  • Avg. length of vent usage for flu related
    illness 10 days
  • Flu admissions requiring ICU care 50
  • Flu admissions requiring mechanical ventilation
    15
  • Flu deaths assumed to be hospitalized 70
  • Daily increase of cases compared to previous day
    3

8
Surge Bed Definitions
  • Level 1 Staffed and available
  • Level 2 Licensed, Staffed
  • Two types
  • Beds made available through patient discharge and
    transfers. These beds are NOT additive they
    are within the Level 1 bed number, but are
    vacated and made available for surge.
  • Beds made available through canceling of elective
    surgery, such as day surgery or endoscopies. Both
    the beds and the staff for those beds can be
    redirected for general hospital patients. These
    beds ADD to overall capacity. (Redirected level 2
    beds, or 2R)
  • Level 3 Licensed but not staffed
  • Generally equipped, including wall gases
  • Level 4 Overflow beds in non-traditional patient
    care areas
  • Cafeterias, lobbies, etc.
  • Require purchase of equipment (including beds),
    supplies and in need of staff

9
Hospital Surge Capacity
Level I 13,067 Current staffed beds Level II
2,000 Re-directed Level III 3,568 Un-staffed
beds Level IV 5,071 Non-trad.
space Total 23,706 Adjusted number reflects
omission of beds that had been double counted
through transfers out to other hospitals. This
number will decrease over time as the elective
admissions become non-elective. All beds are
ultimately dependent on available staffing, so
maximum number may not always be attainable.
10
Comparison of Pandemic Planning Numbers
1957/68-like MDPH Surge Planning 1918-like
Ill 2 M (30) 2M (30) 2 M (30)
Hospitalizations 20,000 (1) 80,000 (4) 220,000 (11)
Deaths 4,600 (0.23) 20,000 (1) 42,000 (2.1)
Based on 3X 1968 projections (Trust For
Americas health report A Killer Flu,
www.healthyamericans.org, June 2005)
11
outbreak 30 attack rate
12
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13
Surge Bed Capacity vs. Need
Levels 1 and 2 Level 3 Level 4 Total Bed Capacity Total Beds Needed Variance
1 (West.) 2,122 277 1,026 3,425 3,284 141
2 (Central) 1,948 460 579 2,987 2,867 120
3 (N.E.) 2,663 788 1,286 4,737 4,022 715
4AB (128) 2,879 740 915 4,534 5,096 (562)
4C (Bos.) 3,013 978 748 4,739 4,014 725
5 (S.E.) 2,761 324 517 3,283 4,277 (994)
STATE 15,061 3,567 5,071 23,705 23,560 145
Requires Purchase of Beds Supplies
14
State Need 23,560out of 23,705 Beds
15
128 Crescent (4AB)Need 562 more beds than
available
16
Southeast (5) Need 994 more level 4 beds than
available
17
Gaps in Bed Capacity
  • All 6 regions expected to fill 100 of level 3
    beds (licensed but unstaffed)
  • All regions will need to open some level 4 beds
    (overflow areas)
  • Two regions will exceed their surge capacity
    (Regions 4AB and 5)
  • Staffing and supplies required for ALL level 3
    and 4 beds
  • Equipment, supplies, and staffing needed for
    level 4 beds

18
Hospital Surge Capacity
  • Despite operational changes, hospitals may become
    overwhelmed depending on usage in communities
    served
  • Alternate care spaces will need to be identified
    to expand hospital capacity
  • Pre-hospital triage will be needed to relieve
    pressure on hospital operations

19
Alternate Care Sites (ACS)
  • Hospitals flu patients requiring mechanical
    ventilation, or those with complex medical
    management needs
  • ACS Sickest flu patients not meeting the
    criteria for hospital admission but for whom home
    care is not possible
  • Location and number to be determined by local
    hospital bed availability.

20
Federal Medical Station Type III (Basic)(FMS
TIII)
SNS Stakeholders Conference
February 21, 2006
21
FMS Goal
  • Address the nations potential shortfall in
    all-hazard mass casualty care events and create a
    federal-level contingency care program as
    directed in HSPD 10.
  • Deploy a surge capability throughout the Nation,
    pre-positioned and configured to respond rapidly
    and effectively to all types of public health
    emergencies, from significant incidents to
    large-scale catastrophic disasters

22
FMS TypesStandardized Capabilities Across
Agencies
  • Type I (Advanced) Has capability to care for
    severely ill or injured patients, equivalent to
    conventional operating room, ICU, and basic
    laboratory (Lead DHS) (DHS uses FMCS)
  • Type II (Specialized) Configured for specific
    clinical scenarios, such as respiratory isolation
    and burn care. Future prototypes to be
    developed. (Lead DHHS)
  • Type III (Basic) Low to mid-level acuity of
    care to provide platform for DMAT teams, special
    needs shelters, quarantine function, alternate
    care facility to augment community hospital
    capability (Lead DHHS)
  • Type IV (FMS) Special Needs Shelter (Lead DHHS)

23
FMS TIII (Basic)Concept
  • A Federal, deployable medical asset designed to
    support regional, state, and local healthcare
    agencies responding to catastrophic events. It
    provides two critical capabilities
  • - Inpatient, non-acute treatment capability for
    areas where hospital bed capacity has been
    exceeded.
  • - A quarantine capability to isolate persons
    suspected of being exposed to or affected by a
    highly contagious disease.
  • Features
  • - Consists of three core modules and bed
    expansion module
  • - Very few recoverable items in the FMCS kit
  • - Easily adapted to meet a range of mass medical
    care needs following disaster
  • - Deploys with SNS technical team to facilitate
    FMCS set up and transfer to Federal Health Care
    Professionals

24
FMS TIII 250 Bed Module FMS TIII 250 Bed Module
Configuration e Configuration
Type III Basic Treatment
Type III Basic Pharmaceutical
Type III Basic Base Support With Quarantine
  • Pharmaceutical
  • Special Medications
  • Prophylaxis
  • Administration
  • Support
  • Feeding
  • Quarantine
  • Beds(50)
  • Housekeeping
  • First Aid Equipment
  • Pediatric Care
  • Adult Care
  • Personal Protective Equipment
  • Primary Care
  • Non-acute Treatment
  • Special Needs
  • Non-acute Treatment
  • Special Needs
  • Beds
  • Bedding
  • Bedside Equipment
  • Current Pack
  • 634 items - 3 days supply
  • 170 pallets (uni-pacs and pallets)
  • 4 tractor trailer (53 ft) loads

FMS
25
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26
Staffing
  • Remains biggest challenge we face
  • Legal protections are key to recruiting personnel
  • Large number of non-clinical personnel also
    needed
  • Potential sources of clinical surge personnel
  • Internal Hospital Strategies
  • MSAR volunteers
  • Medical Reserve Corps that are not included in
    hospital staff
  • Retired, inactive health professionals
  • Students (medical, nursing, pharmacy)
  • Connect and Serve (www.mass.gov)

27
Health Care Professionals
  • Professional qualifications must be checked and
    verified ahead of time
  • Volunteers cannot be assigned to take care of
    patients until their specific knowledge and
    skills are understood
  • It takes time to do this volunteers who have
    not been pre-registered and pre-credentialed may
    be delayed in receiving an assignment

28
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29
Masks v. Respirators
http//www.fda.gov/cdrh/ppe/masksrespirators.html
  • Viruses spread primarily by droplet spray
    therefore surgical mask is appropriate protection
    if working within three feet of infected
    patients. (Upon entering the patients room)
  • Respirators (i.e. N-95 masks, properly fitted)
    should be worn by HCWs who are involved with
    patients undergoing procedures in which
    aerosolized particles may be generated.
    (endotracheal intubation, suctioning, nebulizer
    therapy, etc.)


30
Oxygen Needs
  • Model presumes that patients in Level IV and ACS
    who require oxygen will require oxygen therapy at
    4-6 liters/minute (l.p.m.) flow.
  • Level IV and ACS model is based on 50 patients
    being treated for 10 day period.
  • Assumption is that at any given time, 25 patients
    will require constant oxygen.
  • Cost estimates derived from preliminary survey of
    local vendors.

31
Delivery Systems
  • Oxygen Gaseous Cylinder
  • Oxygen Concentrator
  • Liquid Oxygen
  • Stockpile/Cache Planning

32
Gaseous Cylinder
  • H tank cylinder being used at 4-6 l.p.m. will
    last approximately 1 day per patient.
  • Therefore, each ACS will need a minimum of 250 H
    cylinders worth of oxygen.
  • Most oxygen vendors lease H cylinders to end
    users and recycle the empties replacing them with
    full tanks (similar to bottled water cooler set
    ups used in offices)

33
Oxygen Concentrators
  • Different models can be used at 1 to 6 liters per
    minute.
  • Each patient would need their own concentrator.
  • Primarily used for lower flow (1-2 l.p.m.)
    applications, however units do exist that do 6
    l.p.m. and more expensive units could provide
    oxygen up to 10 l.p.m.
  • Concentrators produce oxygen from room air and
    therefore do not require any gaseous or liquid
    oxygen to be supplied.

34
Liquid Oxygen
  • Based on cryogenic technology.
  • Most hospitals have liquid oxygen tanks on their
    premises used to supply oxygen throughout
    facility.
  • Cost is based on pounds.
  • It is estimated that at approx. 6 l.p.m., each
    patient would probably use approx. 280 pounds for
    a 10 day period

35
Oxygen Stockpile/Cache Planning
  • MDPH representatives have started to conduct
    outreach such as attending New England Medical
    Equipment Dealers quarterly meeting Dec. 8th in
    Boxboro, MA.
  • MDPH will contact major medical supply
    vendors/distributors including local and regional
    oxygen suppliers to explore the topic of securing
    adequate oxygen supplies during a regional,
    statewide and national pandemic surge situations.

36
Ventilators
  • Hospital Ventilators cost approx. 25,000/unit.
  • Portable ventilator contained within SNS stock
    costs approx.7,900/unit.
  • Looking into prices for portable ventilators.
  • MDPH will work with ventilator suppliers and
    manufacturers to explore state and nationwide
    ventilator availability.

37
Ventilators
  • Massachusetts Department of Public Health is
    currently in the process of evaluating
    ventilators and O2-concentrators.
  • DPH is considering purchasing 1000-2000 vents and
    O2-concentrators for our state wide stockpile.

38
Surge Supply Caches Total Cost for 50 Bed ACS
250,000
  • Approx. 5000 per patient
  • Approx. 20,000 Oxygen and Suction supplies
  • Approx. 40,500 durable medical supplies
  • Approx 17,600 for Intravenous related supplies
  • Approx. 78,800 for infrastructure/administrative
    supplies

39
Alternate Care Site Costs (cont.)
  • Approx 28,000 for support service costs
    (laundry, food, lab-work etc.)
  • Approx. 46,600 Pandemic related medicines
  • Approx 7500 for acute/non-emergent maintenance
    meds
  • Approx. 13,000 for stocked Crash Cart

40
Maximizing the Supply Chain
  • Identify items for surge
  • Increase par levels for on site cache
  • For pharmaceuticals, distributors maintain 21
    day inventory
  • Work with suppliers
  • Place orders early in pandemic
  • Identify alternate sources

41
Maximizing the Supply Chain (cont.)
  • What else?
  • All suggestions are welcomed!

42
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43
Pandemic Response Actions Timing and Potential
Impacts
Pandemic influenza disease
Impact
Vaccination
Time
44
Local Infectious Disease Emergency Planning
  • Most of the impact and most of the response will
    be local.
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