Hospital Emergency Operations Plan Workshop

Similar documents
The Joint Commission s Emergency Management Update

Accreditation Program: Hospital. Emergency Management

The Joint Commission Approach to Evaluation of Emergency Management New Standards

Appendix I. Joint Commission Emergency Management Standards and Related Elements of Performance

Guide to Physical Security Planning & Response

Hospital Emergency Operations Plan

Pike County General Health District. Emergency Response Plan

Mass Casualty Disaster Plan Checklist: A Template for Healthcare Facilities

Maryland Emergency Operations Plan

Michigan Hospital Guide to Emergency Management: Linking the Hospital Preparedness Program with Joint Commission Success

Essential Components of Emergency Management Plans at Community Health Centers Crosswalk of Plan Elements

Hospital Incident Command System Revision Project

2014 Emergency Preparedness Executive Report: Accomplishments and Next Steps

B E F O R E T H E E M E R G E N C Y

Recommended Disaster Core Competencies For Hospital Personnel

Emergency Preparedness Tips and Actions for the Workplace

South Puget Sound Community College Emergency Operations Plan Annex H RECOVERY

ON-SITE INCIDENT MANAGEMENT

B.1 DISASTER RECOVERY

Pilot Nursing Home Emergency Management Assessment Tool

ST. JOHNS COUNTY COMPREHENSIVE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT PLAN APRIL Appendix E. Training Program

Montana Department of Public Health & Human Services

CONTINUITY OF OPERATIONS PLANNING

North Carolina Emergency Management

ESF 8. Public Health and Medical Services

CITY OF KENT, WASHINGTON COMPREHENSIVE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT PLAN APPENDIX 3 REFERENCES

Texas Exercise Frequently Asked Questions 2013

Template Policy on Healthcare Facility Patient Evacuation and Shelter-in Place

UNION COLLEGE INCIDENT RESPONSE PLAN

Table of Contents ESF

<Agency Name> Hospital Emergency Operations Plan (EOP) TEMPLATE

ESF 14. Long-Term Community Recovery

EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT PLANNING CRITERIA FOR AMBULATORY SURGICAL CENTERS

Plan Development and Review Guidance for local Emergency Operations Plans

MODULE III PLANNING &TRIAGE

4 Insurance 5 Availability of alternate sources for critical supplies/services

FEMA COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

Emergency Management Planning Criteria for Ambulatory Surgical Centers (State Criteria Form)

I. MISSION STATEMENT. Ensure a comprehensive public health and medical response following a disaster or emergency. SCOPE AND POLICIES

Integration of Home Health, Hospice, and Personal Service Agencies into Indiana s District Preparedness Planning Process

OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY MASTER EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT PLAN

Post-Disaster Recovery New York State Department of Health Experience with Superstorm Sandy

B POD MISSION STATEMENT

CCHC Emergency Preparedness Gap Analysis

PHARMACY S ROLE IN EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS- HOW YOU CAN BECOME INVOLVED

Center for Clinical Standards and Quality/Survey & Certification Group

Template 7.1. Core Functions of Hospital Facilities and Providers in the Implementation of CSC Plans

UCF Office of Emergency Management Strategic Plan

North Carolina Emergency Management. Preparedness, Response & Long-Term Recovery

AMBULATORY SURGICAL CENTERS

2015 Emergency Management Course Schedule

For Official Use Only. Springfield-Greene County, Missouri Multi-Year Training and Exercise Plan (TEP) July 27, For Official Use Only

HOSPITALS STATUTE RULE CRITERIA. Current until changed by State Legislature or AHCA

NEBRASKA STATE HOMELAND SECURITY STRATEGY

Continuity of Healthcare Operations 7 Mission Essential Functions

BRYN MAWR COLLEGE EMERGENCY RESPONSE PLAN Revised 3/17/08 (abridged)

Fairfax County Government. Emergency Planning Guidance for Medical and Patient Care Facilities

Mass Gatherings Medical Strategies for Weapons of Mass Destruction

Michigan Department of Community Health. Office of Public Health Preparedness. Amber Pitts ASPR Healthcare Preparedness Analyst

APPENDIX XII: EMERGENCY SUPPORT FUNCTION 12 - ENERGY

Preparedness in the Southwest

ESF-3 COMMUNICATIONS AND WARNING

Page Administrative Summary...3 Introduction Comprehensive Approach Conclusion

NIMS ICS 100.HCb. Instructions

Maricopa County Emergency Management

EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS CHECKLIST RECOMMENDED TOOL FOR EFFECTIVE HEALTH CARE FACILITY PLANNING Not Started In Progress Completed

Emergency Management of Long-term Care Facilities

Home Care and Hospice Emergency Preparedness

Emergency Management

TEXAS HOMELAND SECURITY STRATEGIC PLAN : PRIORITY ACTIONS

The Role of Military Public Health and Healthcare Providers in National Bioterrorism Event Consequence Management

Western Washington University Basic Plan A part of Western s Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan

University of California San Francisco Emergency Response Management Plan PART 1 PART 1 OVERVIEW OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT.

ElizabEth City StatE ECSU. EmErgENcy OpErAtiONs plan

University of San Francisco EMERGENCY OPERATIONS PLAN

Appendix F Incident Response Guides (IRGs)

AMBULATORY SURGICAL CENTERS (Based upon AHCA Form # JUL 94)

Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP) Guidelines for Skilled Nursing & Assisted Living Facilities (Name of Facility)

Introduction to Emergency Management

MAJOR PLANNING CONSIDERATIONS CHECKLIST

Transcription:

Hospital Emergency Operations Plan Workshop Updating the Hospital and Rural Medical Center EOP for the Use of Volunteers in Medical Surge AGENCY LOGO

Acknowledgements: This workshop was developed by the Mesa County Health Department as part of the National Association of City and County Health Officials (NACCHO) Advanced Practice Centers (APC) Program (Blueprint Project.) It takes into account new information in light of: Emergency Support Function 8 (ESF8) Planning; Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP); Hospital Incident Command System (HICS); and National Health Security Strategy (NHSS). California Emergency Medical Services Authority s Clinic Emergency Preparedness Project is acknowledged for providing a framework from which a Hospital Emergency Operations Plan template could be created. Contributions of Family Health West Hospital, Fruita, Colorado in the review and revision of this information.

Objectives Participants will understand the importance and process needed for All Hazard emergency operations planning in Hospitals. Participants will understand the phases of Emergency Management. Participants will understand how an incident command leadership structure is an integrated component of the Hospital emergency operations planning. Participants will understand the major components needed to write an effective hospital emergency operations plan. Participants will understand why volunteer use in medical surge is critical to writing an effective plan for rural hospitals.

Why is this an issue today? Terrorism Disasters Other What keeps you awake at night? What often happens? What are you unprepared for? What can be done to plan for these situations? I knew this would happen! FEMA News Andrea Booher

How does terrorism/disasters affect the healthcare system? Produces mass casualties Murrah Building in Oklahoma City Suicide bombers in Middle East Olympic Park Bombing in Atlanta Twin Towers in New York Hurricane Katrina Virginia Tech School Shooting Mexican Hat, Utah Bus rollover (AP-Associated Press)

How does terrorism/disasters affect the healthcare system? Produces a redirection of resources and change in preparedness activities Smallpox planning for hospitals and health departments H1N1 Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) vaccines and drug caches, mass dispensing plans Surge capacity planning Agro-chemical/oil and gas chemical regulatory compliance issues

Haven t we done this before? Pre-1950 s Civil Defense Era. Fire Protection Era (1960 s-1970 s) Disaster Planning Era (1970 s) Emergency response for hospitals used to mean a disaster plan, fire plan, utility failure plan. Current (post- 9-11) all-hazards expectations (public/partners): community integration, address all aspects of patient care issues, records and data tracking/security, supply status tracking, surge resource tracking. Result: more complex planning due to a more complex response.

Hospital planning & preparedness County Mass Casualty Plan Surge capacity planning (H1N1) Aligns with EOP plans at city/county level NIMS/ICS compliance Homeland Security compliance funding HPP deliverables LPHA grants and deliverables

Hospital planning & preparedness State Hospital Associations: Emergency planning, HSEEP, state-level hospital coordination systems. 9-11 and heightened expectations for increased integration in surge capacity and response. Tendency towards credentialing and accreditation: Credentialing for surge staff/volunteers National trends toward accreditation: schools and health departments. What will be the future relationship between CMS-CoP s and Joint Commission Standards?

Chemical incidents planning considerations What measures must be planned in advance to safely evacuate/ treat patients contaminated with toxic chemicals? Does your hospital have the capability to decontaminate? What antidote medications might be important if a chemical terrorist attack occurred?

Definitions Capacity: amount or availability of resources and ability of staff, training, and depth. Capability: type of services in terms of emergencies, partnerships, and readiness. Vulnerability: susceptibility to failure due to inadequate resources, training, equipment, or planning. The goal is to decrease vulnerability. Readiness/Preparedness: a direct result of the adequacy of planning and the potential of those plans to create results in the area of training and resources.

What is an incident? Any event that overwhelms existing resources to deal with that event. Weather tornadoes, flooding, severe storms Terrorism Infrastructure failures affecting operations for a prolonged period Hazardous materials incident Large volume of patients Pandemic

Incident implications Transportation Electrical Telephone Water Fuel Structural Communications

Incident implications Incidents restrict and overwhelm resources, communications, transportation and utilities. Individuals and communities are cut off from the outside support.

What is your goal in an incident? RESPONSE manage victims (treat, triage, transfer, disposition). RECOVERY operational, financial, and return to normal operations.

All Hazards approach to planning A conceptual framework for organizing and managing emergency protection efforts.

Who is involved in All Hazard response efforts? Federal Tribal State Local Emergency Management Public Works Fire/Rescue EMS Hospitals Public Health

All Hazard steps Planning Training Exercising Policies & procedures Resource requirements Resource upgrade

Major Incident Operations Disruption of normal process of health care delivery Displacement of dayto-day patient management of casualties Distraction of health care providers from usual workflow Addition of mental health burden Disruption of supply chain Disruption of communication systems Fiscal disruption

Emergency Operations Plan Introduction Procedures & Operations HICS Job Action Sheets Specific Departmental Tools Forms/Resources

Emergency Operations Introduction Plan-Part 1 General overview of <Hospital Name> and facilities/support. Purpose/Policy Provide continuous quality improvement. Provide coordination and integration. Scope Addresses Joint Commission and CMS Conditions of Participation (CoPs.)

All Hazards Emergency Mitigation: Operations Removing/lessening the conditions that lead to incidents. Preparedness Readiness for the unavoidable. Response Decreasing the severity/intensity of an incident. Recovery Getting back to normal.

Mitigation Hospital Hazard Vulnerability Analysis (HVA) Multiple Tools Available

Mitigation Hazard identification Hazard Assessment (HVA) Structural code compliance Equipment and maintenance

Plan development Training courses Exercises Employee education and competencies Public education Preparedness

Response Alerting Assessment Mobilizing- Healthcare partners and ESF8 Implementing plan Activate systems (HICS, EOC) Control, Set priorities- Infection etc. Communication and situational awareness

Recovery Those activities undertaken by a hospital after an emergency or disaster occurs to restore minimum services and move towards longterm restoration.

Recovery Return to normal Detailed damage assessment Care and shelter continues Funding assistance Remove debris

Part 2- Specific procedures & operations Patient Flow Triage Treatment Areas Security Activities Entry & Egress Visitors Access

Procedures & operations Communications Telephone Back-up systems Radio (VHF/800) Satellite phone Walkie Talkies HAM radio Fax

Procedures & operations Patient admissions, triage, disaster tags, registration process Elective procedures Discharge of patients

Procedures & operations News Media Public Information Officer (PIO) Strategic location Joint Information Center (JIC)

Procedures & operations Hotline Family of victims, visitors, outpatients

Procedures & operations Supplies & equipment Essential supplies Pharmaceuticals Medical supplies Equipment Food Water Linen Utilities

Procedures & operations Morgue DOAs Others that expire

Procedures & operations Evacuation Authority Transportation Location Evacuation routes Practice/Test

Procedures & operations Continuing and/or reestablishing operations Off site care (Alternate Care Sites, or ACS)

Procedures & operations Essential utility alternatives Electrical Water Medical gas Waste disposal Fuel

Procedures & operations Isolation & decontamination Plan & procedure Equipment Training

Procedures & operations Orientation & education Annual plan evaluation

Emergency Operations Plan Part 3- HICS Job Action Sheets

HICS Job Action sheets Incident Command Operations Logistics Finance and Administration Planning Others

HICS Job Action sheets One for each position. Embodies title, mission/function and duties. Adjusted to meet hospital needs.

Emergency Operations Plan Part 4 Specific department tools

Specific departmental plans Emergency Department Security Maintenance Nursing floors Admission policy & registration Emergency triage Evacuation Communications Emergency Operations Center

Emergency Operations Plan Part 5-forms/resources

Help drive positions Forms/Resources Documentation aid Financial recovery Decreases liability Enhances & tracks communication

Emergency Management A successful interface needs: Planning Training Exercising

According to Joint Commission 1 : Emergency Management is now its own accreditation manual chapter. All Standards and Elements of Performance from 2009 are incorporated into the 2010 Emergency Management chapter. This new chapter contains some standards that were in HR, EC and MS sections. Critical Access Hospital requirements are similar to other types of hospitals in most counties. 1 http://www.jointcommission.org/

Emergency Operations Plan Emergency Operations Plan (EOP) describes response procedures: Written plan Capabilities to self-sustain for up to 96 hours [EM.02.01.01] As well as Recovery strategies and surge capabilities. Initiation and termination of response and recovery phases. Defines authorities and community relationships Alternative care sites, alternate EOC. Actual implementation is documented.

Emergency Operations Plan Plan Structure

Emergency Operations Plan Addresses Twelve Critical Access Hospital Joint Commission Components: Planning [EM.01.01.01] The EOP [EM.02.01.01] Communication [EM.02.02.01] Resources & Assets [EM.02.02.03] Safety & Security [EM.02.02.05] Staff responsibilities [EM.02.02.07] Utilities Management [EM.02.02.09] Patient, clinical & support activities [EM.02.02.11] Volunteer Management [EM.02.02.13] Volunteer Credentialing [EM.02.02.15] HVA and Evaluation [EM.03.01.01] Plan Evaluation [EM.03.01.03]

Emergency Operations Plan EM.01.01.01 Planning (8 measures) The critical access hospital engages in planning activities prior to developing its written Emergency Operations Plan. EM.02.01.01 The Plan (8 measures) The critical access hospital has an Emergency Operations Plan. EM.02.02.01 Communication (15 measures) As part of its Emergency Operations Plan, the critical access hospital prepares for how it will communicate during emergencies. EM.02.02.03 Resources & Assets (9 measures) As part of its Emergency Operations Plan, the critical access hospital prepares for how it will manage resources and assets during emergencies.

Emergency Operations Plan EM.02.02.05 Safety and Security (9 measures) As part of its Emergency Operations Plan, the critical access hospital prepares for how it will manage security and safety during an emergency. EM.02.02.07 Staff Responsibilities (9 measures) As part of its Emergency Operations Plan, the critical access hospital prepares for how it will manage staff during an emergency. EM.02.02.09 Utilities Management (7 measures) As part of its Emergency Operations Plan, the critical access hospital prepares for how it will manage utilities during an emergency. EM.02.02.11 Patient, clinical & support activities (8 measures) As part of its Emergency Operations Plan, the critical access hospital prepares for how it will manage patients during emergencies.

Emergency Operations Plan EM.02.02.13 Volunteer Management (9 measures) During disasters, the critical access hospital may grant disaster privileges to volunteer licensed independent practitioners. EM.02.02.15 Volunteer Credentialing (9 measures) During disasters, the critical access hospital may assign disaster responsibilities to volunteer practitioners who are not licensed independent practitioners, but who are required by law and regulation to have a license, certification, or registration. EM.03.01.01 Vulnerability Assessment and Evaluation (3 measures) The critical access hospital evaluates the effectiveness of its emergency management planning activities. EM.03.01.03 Evaluating the Plan (17 measures) The critical access hospital evaluates the effectiveness of its Emergency Operations Plan.

Use of volunteers in medical surge 18 Elements of Performance (EP s) of Joint Commission Standards address use of volunteers. Medical Surge exercises that are HSEEPcompliant must address the use of volunteers in surge activities. How deep is your hospital in each staff skill area? By department? Supervisor? Facility? Occupation? Specialty?

For Volunteer Licensed Independent Practitioners and Volunteer Practitioners Section 1: Disaster Privileges Section 2: Credentials Verification Section 3: Volunteer Oversight Section 4: Cessation of Volunteers

Use of volunteers What can they do? What can t they do, unless supervised? What shouldn t they do? Who can they be? Can spontaneous unassigned volunteers ( SUVs ) be used? What are the most likely scenarios? Who can and cannot supervise volunteers?

Review: The Emergency Operations Plan Covers all of the All Hazards phases of Emergency Management Mitigation Planning Response Recovery As well as communications with ESF8 partners

Where do I start? <Hospital Name> has: Emergency Operations Plan (a base plan to start with). Departmental Plans (ED, Triage, Admissions, Evacuation, Security. Email <hospital point of contact> to receive the plans electronically.

Center for HICS Education & Training- www.hicscenter.org Guidebook Training Resources Job Action Sheets Forms Internal (13) & External (14) Scenarios

<Presenter POC information>