Title: Hospital Disaster Planning for the Real World
1Hospital Disaster Planningfor the Real World
- John E. Prescott, MD,FACEP
- Dean, WVU School of Medicine
2- Disasters are unimaginable.
3- Disasters are sudden and
- come-as-you-are.
4Hospital Disaster Planning
- We have a plan for every contingency.
5Hospital Disaster Planning
- We have a plan for every contingency.
- We exercise according to our plan.
6Hospital Disaster Planning
- We have a plan for every contingency.
- We exercise according to our plan.
- Disasters never go according to the plan.
7Take home message
- Learn the principles of disaster planning so that
they can be used in any situation.
8Objectives for today
- Realize the importance of hospital disaster
planning. - Know how to assess the key components of a
hospital disaster plan. - Understand phased disaster responses.
- Know how and why disaster responses fail.
- Understand after action reviews.
9Disaster
- Any emergency that disrupts normal community
function causing concern for the safety of its
citizens including their lives and property.
10Mass Casualty Incident (MCI)
- Any event that leads to the generation of a large
number of casualties.
11Disaster Medicine
- The study of how humans cope with events (both
man-made and natural) that seriously disrupt
normal community function and cause concern for
the safety of people.
12Disaster Planning
- Prime function is to minimize the resulting loss
of property, injuries, suffering and death that
accompanies a disaster.
13Hospital Disaster Planning
- The goal is to minimize the resulting injuries,
suffering, and death that accompanies a disaster
(same as above)
and - Provide continued quality care to those patients
in the hospital.
14George Patton key concept
- Plans must be simple and flexible. They should
be made by the people who are going to execute
them.
15Public health personnel
- Must understand the basic concepts of disaster
medicine and should be able to lead their
hospitals and communities in disaster
preparedness and response.
16Phases of the disaster response
- Activation phase
- Notification and initial response
- Organization of command and control
17Phases of the disaster response
- Implementation phase
- Search and rescue
- Triage, initial stabilization and transport
- Definitive management of patients/hazards
18Phases of the disaster response
- Recovery phase
- Scene withdrawal
- Return to normal operations
- Debriefing
19Key Factors in a Successful Plan
- Simplicity
- Flexibility
- Coordination
- Leadership
- Communication
20Simplicity
- Keep the disaster routine as close as possible
to the everyday actions of hospital personnel. - Confusion reigns when the plan strays from the
norm. - People do best what they do everyday.
21Flexibility
- Allows for adjusting the response to the
situation. - Use the plan as a framework for decision making.
22Coordination
- Knowing what you are supposed to do during a
crisis, as well as having a basic understanding
of how others are responding. - Requires advanced knowledge of capabilities and
resources internal and external. - Prevents waste and bickering.
23Leadership
- The personal element built into every plan and
often the deciding factor in its success or
failure. - The position has authority not the individual.
24Leaders
- Must remain calm.
- Must provide clear and concise orders
(direction) especially when dealing with
individuals they do not know. - Must constantly reevaluate priorities based on
need and the greatest good.
25Communication
- Internal and external it is often confused or
compromised. - Effective communication is frequently mentioned
as the response element most likely to fail. - Poor communication Inefficiency (and sometimes,
panic).
26Effective Communication
- The delivery of the right information to the
right people at the right time in an
understandable and effective form. - Do you have a need to know?
- At least 50 of the information you first receive
will be wrong.
27Hospital disaster planning
- Requires a high degree of motivation.
- First step, find and review your current plan.
- Question whether it is a workable tool or
obsolete bookend. - Do not work in a vacuum.
- Who is in charge?
- Prepare for the worst.
28Key components of a hospital disaster plan
- The flow of patients into the hospital must be
direct and open. - Patient flow must be quick and direct throughout
the hospital. - Triage area near disembarkation point.
- Treatment areas must be pre-determined and marked.
29Key components of a hospital disaster plan
- Patients must be identified and logged in quickly
and accurately. - A command post must be operational in a timely
manner. - A command structure must be in place.
- Once notified, beds must be found in the ED, OR,
and ICU.
30Key components of a hospital disaster plan
- Security for all of the areas must be maintained.
- A system for the rapid recall of staff must be in
place. - Effective communication from the site to the
hospital must be maintained. - Effective communication in the hospital must be
maintained.
31Key components of a hospital disaster plan
- Information areas for families and media must be
established. - There must be rapid access to critical hospital
supplies. - Provision for the serious psychological impact on
victims and staff must be made. - Contingency plans for water, electricity and
transportation must be made.
32Key components of a hospital disaster plan
- Evacuation plans for hospital patients and staff
must be established. - Mutual aid agreements with other hospitals and
surrounding communities must be defined. - Recognition, isolation and treatment of
contaminated/infected patients must be addressed. - Practice. Practice. Practice.
33Phased Disaster Plans
- The hospital response is tailored to the specific
elements of the disaster scope, of patients,
type of patients, etc.
and - the capabilities (depth) of the hospital.
34Phased Disaster Plans
- Phased rather than all or none.
- Typically in place at larger community hospitals
or teaching hospitals. - Phase I On-call staff
- Phase II On-call staff and select groups
- Phase III Total staff mobilization
35After Action Review
- An absolute requisite for improving the
hospitals response. - Should be conducted at every unit and results
written down. - Should lead to modifications of the plan.
- Leadership and Communication
36AAR General Considerations
- People and what they did.
- Equipment and how it functioned.
- Time management.
- The plan and how it worked.
- Order and how it was maintained.
37Summary
- Realize the importance of hospital disaster
planning. - Know how to assess the key components of a
hospital disaster plan. - Understand phased disaster responses.
- Know how and why disaster responses fail.
- Understand after action reviews.
38Summary
- It can happen here
- Planning is the most important element in any
effective disaster response. - You can play a critical role in disaster planning.
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presentation at the link below. - http//tinyurl.com/9bthk
- Once youve completed the survey, follow the
prompt to the CE credit form.