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ECRN Packet: Disaster Activity Responsibilities of the ECRN

ECRN Packet: Disaster Activity Responsibilities of the ECRN. Condell Medical Center EMS System Prepared by: Sharon Hopkins, RN, BSN, EMT-P EMS Educator Information contribution: Debbie Semenek, RN, RMT-P Region X Multiple Victims & Mass Casualty Plan, July 2006. Objectives.

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ECRN Packet: Disaster Activity Responsibilities of the ECRN

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  1. ECRN Packet:Disaster Activity Responsibilities of the ECRN Condell Medical Center EMS System Prepared by: Sharon Hopkins, RN, BSN, EMT-P EMS Educator Information contribution: Debbie Semenek, RN, RMT-P Region X Multiple Victims & Mass Casualty Plan, July 2006

  2. Objectives Upon successful completion of this module, the ECRN should be able to: • Define the differences between the Multiple Victim Policy from the Mass Casualty Plan • State the responsibilities of the ECRN based on being an Associate Hospital (LFH) versus Resource Hospital (CMC) • Identify resources utilized in-house • Successfully complete the quiz with a score of 80% or greater

  3. Disaster Plans • Multiple Victim and Mass Casualty Plan • Local plan with local resources used • Resource Hospital for the fire department of the disaster site serves as communication link • Emergency Medical Disaster Plan • State response plan • POD hospitals serve as communication link • National Disaster Medical Systems (NDMS) • Large scale national response utilized

  4. IDPH Regions • State of Illinois divided into 11 Regions • Geographically, Lake County is Region 10 • 4 Resource Hospitals in Region 10 • Condell Medical Center (CMC) • Highland Park Hospital (HPH) • St. Francis - Evanston • Vista Health East (Victory Memorial) • POD Hospital for Region X is Highland Park Hospital (for activation of State Disaster Plan)

  5. CMC - As A Resource Hospital • Affiliated departments • Countryside Libertyville • Grayslake  Mundelein • Knollwood Ambulance  Round Lake • Lake Bluff  Wauconda • Lake Forest Fire • Associate Hospital • Lake Forest Hospital

  6. What Is A Disaster? • Difficult to use a “number” for declaring a disaster • 15 patients at 2 pm may not be as big a problem as 15 patients at 2 am based on immediate availability of resources • A disaster is any incident that overwhelms your available resources at that particular time or for the particular circumstances of the disaster

  7. Disaster Plans • EMS personnel need to declare and activate one of the plans early • Without early activation, hospitals have a hard time getting prepared; hospitals feel “behind the eight ball” • It is easier to cancel additional help summoned than to try to work short handed

  8. MULTIPLE VICTIM INCIDENT

  9. Multiple Victim Incident • Responding EMS personnel can handle the situation with adequate numbers of additional personnel and equipment available within a short period of time. Normal levels of care and transportation can be provided. • Attempts are made to evenly distribute patients to receiving hospitals by field personnel • Hospitals may need to activate their internal disaster plan

  10. Multiple Victim Incident • Field application • triage tags are not required • if possible, one patient per ambulance (normal transport conditions) • radio report called to the receiving hospital as normal • run reports completed by the transporting ambulance personnel

  11. Multiple Victim Incident • Note: • The first critically injured victims most likely would be transported to the nearest, most appropriate hospital before or while the first communications are being established with the Resource Hospital • Bottom line: • When you hear of a disaster in your region, prepare immediately as if you are receiving patients (because you just might be!!!)

  12. Multiple Victim Incident • Radio reports must be given on all transported patients • This means every transporting ambulance will be communicating about their individual patient with the receiving hospital and this will take coordination between the field and the ED • With coordination from hospitals and field personnel, goal is to avoid overwhelming any one hospital

  13. Multiple Victim Incident • Think of these incidents as “mini-disasters” • similar to the busiest day you have had in the ED • just more patients with same or similar complaints are showing up within a tight time frame from of each other

  14. MASS CASUALTY PLAN

  15. Mass Casualty Plan • Number of patients and nature of injuries make normal level of stabilization and care in field unachievable and/or • Number of EMS providers and ambulances that can be quickly brought to the scene is not enough • All attempts are to be made to evenly distribute the patients to receiving hospitals

  16. Mass Casualty Plan • Practical application for a MCI • Triage tags will be used on all patients • Ambulances may transport more than one a patient at a time • No radio reports to receiving hospitals; care is delivered via SOP’s • Run reports are not necessary

  17. Field Contact With Hospitals • Multiple Victim Incident • EMS to contact their specific Resource Hospital (CMC) ASAP • Mass Casualty Plan • EMS to contact their specific Resource Hospital (CMC) ASAP • Coordination of patient transportation will be done via the Resource Hospital

  18. First Communications From Field • Radio report may be initially minimal • Type/nature of incident (MVC, explosion, building collapse, etc) • Incident location • Closest hospitals that could receive patients • Estimated number of victims & categories (red, yellow, green) • Types of injuries/illnesses (blunt, penetrating, burns, etc) • Special needs (ie: decontamination) • ETA for the 1st victims • Call back number & name to contact the scene (VERY IMPORTANT TO GET THIS NUMBER!)

  19. The “Green” Disaster Victim • Important information to obtain from the field regarding the number of “green” patients: • what number of green patients can be placed in a wheelchair or otherwise left sitting up • what number of green patients will need a cart • these patients are categorized green but may need transportation with a cervical collar and/or backboard due to the nature of their injuries

  20. Activities In The Field • Field personnel performing • triage first • injuries sorted; patient categories assigned (red, yellow, green, black) • followed by treatment • performed in the field in areas set up to provide treatment based on acuity levels (red is the most critical patient) • and finally transportation off the site

  21. Triaging of Patients • Red - victims who are most critically injured; in need of immediate care for life-threatening injuries or illness • Yellow - those less critically injured; non-life threatening injuries • Green - those with injuries that are not life or limb threatening • Black - those who have died or whose injuries do not support survival

  22. METTAG SAMPLE FRONT BACK

  23. Disaster Tags - General Guidelines • Red • Treatable life-threatening illness or injures • Patient has a altered mental status - unable to follow simple commands • Carotid pulse present; radial pulse absent • if both carotid & radial pulses are present, categorized considering respiratory rate and mental status • Respirations < 10 or > 30

  24. Disaster Tags - General Guidelines • Yellow • Serious but not life-threatening illness or injury • Delayed care • Patient is alert • Patient has a radial pulse • Respirations less than 30 per minute

  25. Disaster Tags - General Guidelines • Green • Minor musculoskeletal injuries, minor soft tissue injuries • Patient may or may not be able to walk • Patient is alert • Patient has a radial pulse • Respirations less than 30 per minute

  26. Disaster Tags - General Guidelines • Black • Dead or fatally injured patients • Resources limited and cannot be devoted to these patients • If resources are unlimited, arrested patients may become a Red (in very unique situations would this occur)

  27. Hospital Use of Disaster Tags • Disaster tag should become a permanent part of the patient’s chart • EMS and ED staff can use the tags to initiate documentation • during Mass Casualty Plan, EMS run reports are not necessary so all the information from the field is most likely on the disaster tags

  28. Resource Hospital Responsibilities (CMC) • Once notified, serves as medical control of the incident • Collaborate with field personnel to identify possible receiving hospitals based on: • incident location • transport routes open • volume/acuity of patients • ECRN to notify Charge Nurse immediately of the situation

  29. ECRN at Resource Hospital • Begin filling out “Mass Casualty Incident Log” • Establish inter-facility communication • describe nature & location of incident, • approximate number of patients • acuity & type of patients • Continually monitor receiving hospital capabilities • Resource Hospital also is a receiving hospital

  30. ECRN at Resource Hospital • Assess receiving hospitals’ resources • ability to receive patients divided into the number of red, yellow, green that can be accepted • blood inventory • ability to decontaminate patients • ability to send medical personnel and supplies

  31. ED Bed Capacity All staff need to remember: • This is a DISASTER. • This is a unique situation • It is a short term unusual operation • Take your numbers to the max - EMS in the field need all available beds, wheelchairs, hallways in order to transport patients off the scene

  32. Excessive Casualty Load • ECRN must be prepared and anticipate notification of additional receiving hospitals when casualty load exceeds capabilities in closest receiving hospitals • May need to obtain status of specialized facilities as needed (ie: burn units, pediatrics, etc) for additional transport of patients with special needs

  33. Communication With The Scene • ECRN at Resource Hospital (CMC) stays in communication with scene contact (usually Transportation; but could be Incident Commander or designee) • ECRN relays to the field the receiving hospital’s capabilities • Assists with transport management • If casualties imply need for transfusions, may need to coordinate with lab to notify LifeSource for blood

  34. Communication From the Resource Hospital (CMC) • Transportation communicates with ECRN at Resource Hospital (CMC) • ECRN at Resource Hospital (CMC) communicates with ECRN at Associate hospital (LFH) • ECRN at Resource Hospital (CMC) is the one communication link for all hospitals • Maintaining consistent ECRN at the radio minimizes lost information

  35. Communication Pathway Transportation Officer*   Resource Hospital (CMC)   Associate Hospital (LFH) *Communication contact from the scene to the hospital is most often made with Transportation Officer at the site

  36. Receiving Hospital • In Mass Casualty Plan, notification triggered by Resource Hospital (CMC) • Report to Resource Hospital (CMC) ability to receive what number of red, yellow, green patients • Need to think “big” • Doesn’t help a mass casualty situation to say you’ll accept a small number of patients - everyone needs to think big and switch to “disaster mode” of operating/thinking/responding

  37. Receiving Hospital • May need to activate internal plan depending on the situation • Maintain communication log with the Resource Hospital (CMC) • Report increases or limitations in capabilities to Resource Hospital (CMC) ASAP • Be prepared to send pre-assembled medical supply bags to the scene

  38. Patient Flow • Most critical victims from the scene may be transported to closest appropriate hospital before sophisticated communication network established • DO NOT attempt to stop patient flow from individual ambulances not associated with the disaster activity • These ambulances will carry on normal communication practices

  39. Communication • All communication must go through the Resource Hospital (CMC) • Associate Hospitals (LFH) are not to contact the scene directly • Associate Hospitals (LFH) are not to divert individual ambulances • Associate Hospital (LFH) receiving 1st field call from EMS needs to direct EMS to contact the Resource Hospital (CMC)

  40. Medical Personnel To The Scene • May be requested by Incident Command at the site • Team assembled based on need at the scene • Supplies specific to the incident should be brought with • Police escort to be provided • coordinated between Resource Hospital & Incident Command (or designee) at the site • Team to report to Command Post for assignment • Should be uniformed for easy identification

  41. Dispatch To The Scene • Self-dispatching of medical personnel to a disaster site is strictly prohibited • Causes additional chaos due to additional undisciplined and unmonitored persons congesting at the scene • For safety, need organized method to know who the rescuers are and where they are functioning

  42. After Action Report • All hospitals and fire departments involved in the Region X multiple victim/mass Casualty plan to to complete a written report following any incident or scheduled mass casualty drill • Helps during the critique process

  43. After-Incident ReportThe Critique • Form utilized for post-incident critiques by the Region X DMSC committee with intent of continually reviewing and improving the multiple victim/mass casualty plan as well as the education of fire/rescue/hospital and communication personnel

  44. HOSPITAL DISASTER PLAN ACTIVATION

  45. Internal Hospital Plan Better to call for additional help and turn them away than not to have them and wish you did!

  46. Internal Disaster Plan • ECRN needs to coordinate with: • ED MD • Administrator on duty • authorizes the activation of the internal disaster plan and authorizes the cancellation of the plan

  47. Hospital Incident Command • Typical lines of authority in-house • Administration on-duty; on-call • Nursing Supervisor on duty • ED MD • The identified person of authority makes and implements decisions to handle the situation • Often located in a “Command Center” manned by personal with phone access

  48. Additional Resources • You need to know when to get help and where to find the help at your facility • Decontamination capabilities • Trained staff to man key areas of the ED or alternate treatment areas • will serve as a resource for float personnel • how will you identify an ED staff member? • ie: vests, arm bands

  49. Additional Resources • RN’s - especially experienced or comfortable in the ED • MD’s - based on nature of illness or injury • Support personnel - clerks/secretaries/registrars • Runners/transporters • Persons to man phones • Security - control flow of traffic

  50. CMC versus LFH Disaster Plans • The following pages are more specific for CMC staff • The following information can be applied to most facilities any of us could be working at • LFH staff need to determine specific language and locations for their facility based on the information given in the following slides

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