1 / 18

Primary Health Emergency and Business Continuity Management

Primary Health Emergency and Business Continuity Management. Introduction Background to Emergency Planning for Primary Health. Objective . To provide the tools to design your own emergency management and business continuity plan.

harva
Télécharger la présentation

Primary Health Emergency and Business Continuity Management

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. Primary Health Emergency and Business Continuity Management

  2. Introduction Background to Emergency Planning for Primary Health

  3. Objective To provide the tools to design your own emergency management and business continuity plan. To leave with an understanding of what is required, how to start the process and what to consider in your plan. Do you have any other expectations for this session?

  4. Why do we plan? • There is often little or no warning in an emergency • Wrong decisions and indecision can be costly and painful • High standards of service are expected at all times • The community expects an efficient integrated response • Compliance • Cornerstone/other Accreditation

  5. ScenarioUtility Failure

  6. Types of Events Regional • Significant damage • Disruption in services such as transportation, electricity, water, telecommunications Societal • Nation wide • Infrastructure is still intact Localised • Organisation specific • Extended staffing absences Distal • Impacts business flow through key suppliers

  7. Risks for the Waikato Area • Flooding, Storm • Isolation, roads, bridges damaged • Volcanic Activity, property damage, respiratory and skin problems, effects on horticulture and agriculture • Earthquake, loss of life, mass casualties, damage to buildings, roads, bridges, relocation • Tsunami

  8. How to Prepare • Select a team which represents all facets of your organisation • Develop a business continuity plan • Concentrate your resources on the most likely to occur emergencies in your local area with the most serious consequences • Consider also other risks of lesser consequences but higher likelihood.

  9. Business Continuity Plan What are they / What do they Involve • Identifying risks and hazards and the impact they would have on your practice Risk Analysis and Business Impact Evaluation • Developing mitigation strategies to address the risks and hazards

  10. The 4 R’s

  11. Risks • Eliminate or lessen the risk - Reduction • Prepare for it, if it can’t be reduced to a manageable state - Readiness • Decide how you will deal with it - Response • How will you return to business as usual - Recovery

  12. Business Impact Analysis What will be the effect of each of the risks on your organisation

  13. Mitigation Strategies How will you: • Eliminate the risk • Reduce the risk • or accept the risk?

  14. Don’t forget Disruptions to Workforce:temporarylong term managementclinicaladminand RELOCATING

  15. TestingTest the plan before it’s required to be implemented Table Top ExercisesExamples included in packDHB/MoH ExercisesCivil Defence Exercises The best plan is only a plan until it is tested!!!

  16. Questions

  17. DHB Emergency Planners are ‘freely’ available for advice and planning resources.

  18. Thank you for your attendance and support for this work

More Related