INTEGRATING INTERNAL PREPARATIONS

Although integrated planning requires involvement of the external community in your facility plans, healthcare facilities must first be internally integrated. Without a seamless team response, the facility will be unable to assist the outside community.

Response requirements are not always predictable and smooth. Disasters may damage the physical structure of a healthcare facility, as has happened in previous earthquake and flooding events, and the damage must be addressed while staff are responding to the external community disaster (O’Toole, Mair, and Inglesby 2002). In addition, the healthcare facility may be compromised because of failures to the infrastructure, such as the loss of electrical power, water systems, and communication lines. A thorough internal disaster plan should address contingency “work arounds” for all possible damage to the facility.

Communications

Adequate disaster response requires instant and multifaceted communications networks that are reliable and flexible. However, a mere forecast of a disaster can overwhelm vital communication services, and in most disasters, the communication lines are the first to overload or fail. Redundant phone systems, broadcast fax capability, and the ability to increase the number of dedicated wireless phones within the healthcare system should rank high on the facility’s communication to-do list.

A hospital’s first alert or notification of an event may be via public television or radio broadcasts, requiring that hospitals mobilize for an event of which they have little knowledge. As with any community, warnings provide critical information that empowers people at risk to take action to save lives, reduce losses, and speed recovery. The extra time from an early warning allows improved preparedness and activation of services. Unfortunately, our national warning system—the Emergency Alert System—does not reach all people at risk, and the warning capability for many natural disasters is inadequate or may go unheeded.

Testing Capabilities

The U.S. GAO (2003a) reports that less than half of the hospitals surveyed for bioterrorism preparedness in early 2003 had conducted drills or exercises simulating a bioterrorism incident. Although staff training in biological agents was widespread, hospital participation in drills was less common.

The drills, training, and exercises that test plans and abilities and spearhead organizational improvement are among the most important aspects of disaster preparedness. The primary benefit of exercises is to reveal areas needing improvement. When disasters are not threatening, drills and exercises allow participants to make corrective actions to ensure all systems are ready when needed.

Mental Health Preparedness

For every one physical casualty caused by a terrorism incident, there are an estimated 4 to 20 psychological victims (Warwick 2002). In the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, the psychiatric department at St. Vincent’s Catholic Medical Center—just one of the many healthcare facilities in the affected New York area—provided counseling and support to more than 7,000 people and received more than 10,000 calls to their help line during the first two weeks following the disaster (Rosuck 2002).

Hospitals and healthcare services should make provisions for accommodating and managing the substantial acute mental health needs of the community when a natural disaster or terrorist event occurs (JCAHO 2003). Psychological casualties often include those who are treating the physically affected—healthcare providers. For this reason, departments such as nursing, human resources, and social work as well as the chaplaincy, organizational development, and mission staff should be included in mental health planning sessions. Specifically, your organization plan should address the provision of nutritional, housing, spiritual, psychological, and other psychosocial needs and integrate these with the community plan. A triage system for behavioral health must consider the following people:

  • Survivors, those who lost a loved one, rescue workers, and people who witnessed the events

  • Those who lost a home, business, or job as a result of the event

  • Anyone else who was deeply affected

Benchmarking Organization Preparedness

Healthcare facilities can internally assess and broadly “eyeball” levels of preparedness based on assessment data, plans, human resources information, equipment, training, and performance during exercises and actual incidents. Self-assessments, exercises, and procedures for comparison with other facilities are important tools (IAEM 2003). To get accurate data, however, readiness must be evaluated by objective parties against prospectively established standards. A thorough assessment includes evidence of readiness maintained over time.

Readiness is not defined by the creation of a plan or by its periodic testing. To improve preparedness efforts, actions must be documented and efforts made to learn from mistakes and strengthen weaknesses. The current lack of standardized methodologies to compare the events of one facility to those of another, to compare activities among different types of disaster events, or to compare those taking place in different locations hampers the best assessment efforts.

Yet despite the lack of a standardized assessment tool, much is still to be learned from the experiences of hospitals that have implemented emergency management plans in real-world situations.

Automated Tools for Assistance

A plethora of new tools and models is emerging to assist communities in preparing their healthcare sector for response. Two such tools are listed below.

The National Guard Bureau’s Automated Exercise and Assessment System, a free software program, is easily deployed on personal computers and can be used to test community readiness for incidents involving weapons of mass destruction. Communities receive immediate feedback on command decisions, observe the consequences of those decisions, and receive response assessments on multiple levels. Using their actual resources, a participating community can survey and enter those resources into the software’s database and for the next 12 to 14 hours work through one of 11 different scenarios with up to 41 different roles for participants.


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