1 / 26

Unit Four

Unit Four. Hospital Incident Management System (HIMS) for Mass Casualty Incidents (MCI). Objectives. Define mass casualty incidents (MCI) Describe the Multi-casualty Branch structure Use of multiple Groups/Divisions under the Multi-casualty Branch Director Discuss MCI response procedures

Anita
Télécharger la présentation

Unit Four

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit Four Hospital Incident Management System (HIMS) for Mass Casualty Incidents (MCI)

  2. Objectives • Define mass casualty incidents (MCI) • Describe the Multi-casualty Branch structure • Use of multiple Groups/Divisions under the Multi-casualty Branch Director • Discuss MCI response procedures • Review emergency medical service role in MCI • Describe “START” B461 Course

  3. Objectives (cont'd) • Identify the relationship of MCI Groups (triage, treatment, transport) to overall scheme of the HIMS • Prioritize patients using the START method of triage for: • Decontamination • Treatment • Identify considerations in transporting patients to area hospitals B461 Course

  4. Mass Casualty Incidents • Multi-patient Incidents - exceeds normal first responder capabilities • Major medical emergency – any emergency that would require the access of local mutual aid resources • Mass Casualty Incidents - combination of numbers of injured personnel and type of injuries going beyond the capability of an entity’s normal first response • Disaster – State and/or Federal resources are required B461 Course

  5. Mass Casualty Incident Management • Do the greatest good for the greatest number of patients • Make the best use of: • Personnel • Equipment • Medical and facility resources • Limit the spread of the contamination • Minimize the effects of the disaster, incident, or event B461 Course

  6. Triage Considerations • Triage - Term in early 1800s (derived from the French trier, meaning "to sort") • Immediate - Casualty requires lifesaving measures performed without delay if they are to survive • Delayed - Casualty whose treatment can wait without causing additional harm B461 Course

  7. Triage Considerations (cont'd) • Expectant – Casualties that will not survive or will require extensive resources and time if they are to be saved • Minor – Casualties that are generally ambulatory and are injured only slightly B461 Course

  8. Hospital Triage • Use a triage system in an MCI that parallels normal routine • Practice regularly to ensure familiarity • Triage is a continual process • Re-triage all victimstransported by EMS • Set up triage area near the ED entrance • Shielded and secure • Readily accessible B461 Course

  9. Triage • “Greatest good for the greatest number of casualties” • Psychological impact • Classification: RedYellowGreenBlack • Limitations: • Time consuming • User variability • Lack of familiarity B461 Course

  10. TRIAGE CRITERIA: Respiratory status Perfusion and pulse Neurological status TRIAGE CATEGORIES: Walking wounded - “Green” or minimal (relocate when told) Normal findings - “Yellow” or delayed (unable to relocate) Abnormal - “Red” or immediate Non-salvageable - “Black” or expectant START Triage B461 Course

  11. START - Respiratory Status Respiratory Status Respirations Normal No Respiratory Effort > 30 Respirations Go to Expectant Immediate Next Step B461 Course

  12. START - Perfusion Perfusion Status Radial PulsePresent Radial PulseAbsent Cyanotic Go to Immediate Next Step Immediate B461 Course

  13. START - Neurological Status Neurological Status NormalMental Status Change inMental Status Unconscious Move toNext Victim Immediate Immediate B461 Course

  14. Nerve Agent Triage - “Immediate” • Unconsciousness or convulsions • Two or more body systems involved • Requires immediate antidote Rapid intervention should result in a good outcome B461 Course

  15. Initial First Aid Treatment • Immediate removal from source of exposure • severity directly proportional to absorbed dose • Decontamination • Mild soap and water rinse • Antidote administration with airway management support as necessary • Must be provided by properly trained and equipped personnel B461 Course

  16. Nerve Agent Antidote • Atropine • administered to block receptor sites of acetylcholine • 2-PAM Chloride • restores acetylcholinesterase • Mark I Kit or “Combo Pen” B461 Course

  17. First Aid Treatment • Exit Agent Exposure Area • Minor Symptoms Administer: • One Mark I Kit • Major Symptoms Administer: • Three Mark I Kits • Diazepam Required for Severe Casualty • Monitor Patient’s Symptoms B461 Course

  18. Nerve Agent Triage - “Delayed” • Initial symptoms are improving (miosis still present) • Recovering well from pre-hospital antidote therapy B461 Course

  19. Nerve Agent Triage -“Minimal” & “Expectant” Minimal • Walking and talking which indicates intact breathing and circulation • Expectant • Apneic for more than 5 minutes • No pulse or blood pressure B461 Course

  20. Delayed 2 to 50% BSA burns by liquid Eye involvement Minimal < 2% BSA burns by liquid in non-critical areas Mustard Triage • Immediate • Moderate to severe pulmonary symptoms • Expectant • > 50% BSA burns by liquid; apneic/no pulse B461 Course

  21. Triage of Biological Casualties • Triage of biological agent casualties is different: • Symptoms are delayed • Initial cases may go unrecognized • More difficult to detect • Epidemiological information becomes critical B461 Course

  22. TriagePsychological Casualties • Disasters produce tremendous emotional and psychological stress, with large numbers of psychogenic casualties • Presenting signs could be confused with organic disease • Use of START triage system maintains focus on objective signs of disease & minimizes impact of subjective complaints on the triage process • Psychological casualties are usually triaged as “minimal” B461 Course

  23. TriageHospital Arrivals • Casualty arrival is uncoordinated • Arrival times vary • Closest hospital is typically overwhelmed • Medical needs of unaffected community continues • May present at distant hospitals to ensure treatment at clean facilities B461 Course

  24. Contaminated Human Remains • Problems are agent specific: • Decontamination • Containment • Refrigeration until definitive disposal • Follow local coroner and medical examiner protocols: • Establish cooperative agreements for fatality management • Secure personal effects: • Not all can be decontaminated B461 Course

  25. Radiation Protection for Clinical Staff • Fundamental Principles - Time - Distance - Shielding • Personnel Protective Equipment • Contamination Control B461 Course

  26. Protecting Staff from Contamination • Use standard precautions (N95 mask) • Survey hands and clothing frequently • Replace contaminated gloves or clothing • Keep the work area free of contamination B461 Course

More Related