1 / 18

Minnesota Department of Health Multi-Agency Coordination

Minnesota Department of Health Multi-Agency Coordination. Autumn 2006 Office of Emergency Preparedness. MDH Disclaimer.

lotus
Télécharger la présentation

Minnesota Department of Health Multi-Agency Coordination

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. Minnesota Department of HealthMulti-Agency Coordination Autumn 2006 Office of Emergency Preparedness

  2. MDH Disclaimer • This Multi-Agency Coordination (MAC) Power Point is intended to describe the Minnesota Department of Health approach to Multi-Agency Coordination.  It is not intended to serve as a plan for all state and local entities, nor is it intended to be directly applicable to all incidents. This plan describes MDH’s approach to multi-agency coordination in response to a health-related incident. Other agencies are encouraged to seek guidance in planning for the differences and requirements presented in each type of incident and develop similar plans for Multi-Agency Coordination for the applicable discipline/area of responsibility.

  3. Barriers to Effective Interagency Coordination • Different policies & procedures among entities • Different interagency/inter-facility organizational structure • Lack of interagency/inter-facility communications, including frequencies and use of agreements

  4. Barriers to Effective Interagency Coordination (cont.) • Lack of valid, timely, and complete information from all available sources • Differences in terminology for personnel, for assignments, and resources • Little previous interagency/inter-facility training

  5. Multi-Agency Coordination (MAC)Happens… • At the scene of an incident • At an Emergency Operations Center • At an interjurisdictional or regional level • At state and federal levels • Internationally

  6. Why Is MDH Using MAC? • National Incident Management System (NIMS) compliant • NIMS provides a structure for MAC • MAC fits into incident command structure • MAC is coordinationfocusNOTcommand • Supports region-wide planning

  7. Who Staffs a “Health” MAC? • Health Care Entity Representative • Public Health Representative (state or local) • Emergency Medical Services Representative • Homeland Security & Emergency Management Representative

  8. Traditional MAC Information Flow

  9. HEALTH Information Flow when a “Health” MAC is Activated

  10. A “Health” MAC System Can • Be as simple as a teleconference • Be formal and meet at a pre-designated facility • Operate without EOCs open • Be simple or complex; Determined by the incident

  11. Facility / Agency Representatives Facilities Equipment Procedures Information Systems Communication Systems MAC Systems Have Access to All Integrated into a Common System

  12. Primary Functions of a “Health” MAC System • Information Coordination • Recommend Use of Critical Resources • Facilitatehealth-related support and resource tracking • Coordinateinter-facility / interagency policies and strategies

  13. When to Activate a “Health” MAC System • Multiple concurrent health-related incidents • Incidents that are non-site specific • Incidents that are geographically dispersed • Incidents that evolve over time

  14. Who Activates a “Health” MAC System? • Any agency or facility representative (RHRC, PHPC, EMSRB or EMS Regional Dir., HSEM Regional Program Coordinator) • When needs exceed available resources • Regional interagency/inter-facility need to coordinate health-related policies

  15. MAC Committee Representatives • RHRCs • OEP staff • EMS-Program Director & EMSRB • PHPC • HSEM • Local Public Health

  16. Product of MAC Committee • Multi-Agency Coordination Plan Support Annex to the MDH All-Hazards Response & Recovery Plan • Framework for regions to use to develop Regional MAC Annex

  17. MDH MAC Plan is located http://www.health.state.mn.us/oep/planning/allhazards.html

  18. For more information, contact: Janice Maine, Public Health All-Hazards Planner 651-201-5715 Janice.Maine@health.state.mn.us

More Related