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Emergency Preparedness Summit for Long-Term Care Facilities Evacuation

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Virginia Statute requires long-term care facilities to have an evacuation plan. ... Short of a lock-down how well can ingress/egress to the building be controlled? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emergency Preparedness Summit for Long-Term Care Facilities Evacuation


1
Emergency Preparedness Summitfor Long-Term Care
FacilitiesEvacuation Emergency Preparedness
Planning
  • November 29, 2006

2
Why Are We Here?
  • Virginia Statute requires long-term care
    facilities to have an evacuation plan.
  • Long-term care facilities are regulated by the
    Office of Licensure and Certification, Virginia
    Department of Health.
  • Due to the immediate need, VDH has charged its
    Emergency Preparedness and Response Program with
    ensuring effective evacuation plans exist for
    LTCs.

3
Evacuation Plan Timetable
  • Emergency Preparedness Summit
  • November 29, 2006
  • Long-term care facility self-assessment
  • Completed by December 31, 2006
  • Site visit by Fairfax County Health Department to
    review individual facility plans
  • January 1 February 28, 2007
  • Sustainment
  • On-going technical assistance by Fairfax County
    Fire and Rescue Department
  • Transition to VDH Office of Licensure and
    Certification

4
Fundamental Considerations
  • Does your facility have a written disaster plan?
  • Does it include a building evacuation plan for
  • Internal disasters, e.g., fires?
  • External disasters, e.g., major storm events?
  • Does it include plans to move patients to another
    facility if your facility becomes threatened or
    unusable?

5
Fundamental Considerations
  • Have your facility staff
  • Received training on the plan?
  • Participated in a drill?
  • Been provide access to a copy of the written
    plan?

6
Fundamental Considerations
  • What is your plan development and maintenance
    process?
  • Is there a disaster planning committee?
  • Do you collaborate with the fire department,
    health department and emergency management
    department?
  • Is the plan periodically reviewed and updated?

7
Key Facility Personnel
  • How will key roles be staffed during an
    emergency
  • Whos in charge?
  • Who will give patient medical care?
  • Who support the operation of the physical
    facility?
  • Who will fill other essential support roles?

8
Key Facility Personnel
  • How will key roles be staffed if needed
    continuously over an extended period?
  • Have job action sheets been developed for
    employees?
  • Have staff been pre-designated?
  • Have staff been trained on their role in an
    emergency?
  • How will staff be notified to report?
  • Are there assembly points to which employees
    report when re-called?

9
Disaster Plan Activation
  • Does the plan make clear
  • Who has the authority to activate the plan?
  • When it should be activated?
  • The activation process
  • Staff roles during activation?
  • Staff notification procedure, including staff
    call-back?
  • Access to equipment, supplies, and other
    resources needed for activation?
  • Which staff prepare patients?
  • Utilization of available staff based on patient
    care priorities and skill-level needed?

10
Alerting System
  • Regardless of whether during normal business
    hours, evenings or weekends, does the alerting
    system permit
  • Immediate implementation of the plan, if
    necessary?
  • Off-site evacuation not later than two hours
    following the decision to do so?
  • Does the plan specify how
  • Staff, patients and visitors in the facility will
    be notified?
  • External agencies, organizations, and vendors
    will be notified?
  • Notice to alternate facilities is given?
  • Are there back-up notification systems?

11
Response
  • How will resources such as personnel and
    equipment be supplied during a disaster?
  • Are equipment and supply inventories monitored to
    ensure sufficient readiness and amounts in case
    of an emergency?
  • What communications system(s) back-up your
    primary means of communication?
  • Are there special communications systems with
    local government established and, if so, are they
    regularly tested?
  • Are there sufficient provisions for additional
    staff or other resources to operate in your
    facility, should the emergency they be brought in?

12
Security
  • Has a security vulnerability analysis been done
    for your facility that takes into account
  • Structural security of the physical plant
  • Contents, including hazardous materials
  • Proximity to external hazards

13
Security
  • In an emergency
  • Short of a lock-down how well can ingress/egress
    to the building be controlled?
  • How do you control foot and vehicular traffic
    on/off your site?
  • Building lock-down
  • Do you have a lock-down procedure?
  • Does it permit absolute access control to your
    facility?
  • Have you tested your facility lock-down
    procedure?
  • Can you communicate with staff physically located
    outside your facility?
  • Can recalled staff gain access to the building
    during a lock-down?

14
Security
  • What is the procedure for meeting emergency
    medical services responding to your facility?
  • Whats the process for credentialing health care
    workers who may come to your facility to work?
  • How are people be physically identified as being
    authorized to be in the facility, e.g., staff,
    visitors, patients, clergy, media, etc.

15
Communications
  • What is the plan
  • Should communications with the outside world,
    i.e., telephone, fax machine, cellular phone, and
    pager, become overloaded and unusable during an
    emergency?
  • For communications within your facility e.g.,
    inside lines, intercoms, etc., should normal
    means become unusable?
  • For relying on runners as a back-up communication
    method?

16
Resources for Evacuation
  • Have you identified the resources (personnel,
    wheelchairs, ambulance cots, etc.) necessary to
    move patients from your facility?
  • What if elevators are not usable?
  • Have you pre-identified which patients need
    special equipment to be evacuated?
  • Are these resources located in clearly
    identifiable locations accessible to staff?
  • Is the equipment regularly checked and
    maintained?
  • Have staff been trained on the use of this
    equipment?

17
Evacuation to An Alternate Facility
  • Prior to evacuation to an alternate facility,
    have you considered
  • A procedure for discharging patients to their
    homes or those of loved-ones?
  • Moving patients from one area of the facility to
    another should a safe refuge be needed?

18
Evacuation to An Alternate Facility
  • Are there agreements with one or more facilities
    to accept your patients should relocation be
    required?
  • Is this agreement formalized, e.g., MOA, MOU,
    etc?
  • Is there a system for prioritizing patient
    evacuation and concordant provision of
    accompanying staff?
  • Transportation
  • Have appropriate means of transportation been
    pre-identified to re-locate patients?
  • Move in hospital beds?
  • Ventilators?
  • Remain connected to other special equipment?
  • Have you pre-identified routes of travel between
    your facility and the receiving facilities?
  • Is there a back-up transportation method
    identified?

19
Evacuation to An Alternate Facility
  • Other important considerations
  • Have you provided for the movement of patient
    charts and other records and is patient
    confidentiality protected?
  • Have you identified what medication and medical
    supplies will need to be relocated with the
    evacuated patient?
  • How will you ensure the secure transport of
    controlled pharmaceuticals?
  • Is there a procedure for physically inspecting
    your entire facility to ensure that all patients,
    staff and visitors have been safely evacuated?

20
Patient Tracking
and Family Notification
  • Which staff have been pre-designated to track
    patient movement to alternate sites?
  • How are patient family members/guardians
    notified
  • That their loved-one has been evacuated and their
    location?
  • Is being returned to your facility?

21
Government Agency Notification
  • Which agencies need to be notified?
  • Fairfax County Office of Emergency Management
  • Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department
  • Fairfax County Police Department
  • Fairfax County Health Department
  • Virginia Department of Health Office of Licensure
    and Certification
  • Local Ombudsman
  • Others?
  • Have you included in your plan specific points of
    contact and their contact information?
  • Do you frequently check the information by
    conducting a test?

22
Shelter-In-Place
  • If your facility is cut-off from outside help and
    must shelter in place, have you made provisions
    for
  • Immediate refuge inside the physical building
  • Patient and staff
  • Care and comfort
  • Mental health well-being
  • Rotation of staff
  • Using able patients and visitors to assist with
    patient care
  • Medication and medical supply rationing
  • Auxiliary electrical power
  • Potable water supply
  • Food rationing
  • Human waste handling if sanitary disposal is not
    available
  • Solid waste management
  • Laundering of bedding, patient gowns, etc.

23
Disaster Recovery
  • After the emergency is over
  • Who is in charge of the recovery at your
    facility?
  • How will the emergency be documented?
  • Financial matters
  • Inventory and re-supply
  • Record preservation
  • Hazard removal and clean-up
  • Salvage
  • Garbage and waste disposal
  • Servicing of utilities and equipment
  • Physical plan restoration and renovation

24
Disaster Recovery
  • Human factors
  • Critical Incident Stress Debriefing Program
  • Employee Assistance Program
  • Group/Individual counseling services
  • Support to families, staff and patients
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