Title: CONSIDERATIONS FOR MASS CASUALTY INCIDENTS
1CONSIDERATIONS FOR MASS CASUALTY INCIDENTS
csepp multi-hazard medical curriculum
2Objective
- List the four triage categories in the start
system - State three challenges associated with the
management of a mass casualty incident
3 Responding To A Hazardous Materials Event
- Challenges
- Multiple events occurring simultaneously
- Mixed trauma and hazmat casualties
- Self-protection
- Crime scene management and evidence preservation
IMAGE FEMA
4Multiple Casualties Incident - Definition
- In an MCI, available resources are taxed by an
unusually high number of patients - The availability of personnel and supplies will
govern triage and treatment decisions
IMAGES FEMA, US Navy
5MCI - Hazardous Materials Challenges
- Challenges
- Risk of personal injury
- Large numbers of casualties
- Psychogenic casualties
- Transportation obstacles
- Patient decontamination
- Management of resources
IMAGES FEMA, US Navy
6MCI - Management
- Rapid establishment of a safe area for scene
assessment and patient care - Secure incident scene
- Implement incident command system - unified
command
IMAGE FEMA
7MCI - Triage
- Greatest good for the greatest number of
casualties - Four-tiered system
- Red - immediate
- Yellow - delayed
- Green - minimal
- Black - expectant
- Limitations
- Time Consuming
- User variability
- Lack of familiarity
IMAGE USAF
8Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment (S.T.A.R.T.)
- Walking wounded - Green or minimal
- Direct walking wounded/worried to a collection
point/receiving area - Normal findings - Yellow or delayed
- Abnormal - Red or immediate
9S.T.A.R.T. Full Algorithm
10JumpSTART TRIAGE-Ages 1-8
RESPIRATIONS
ALL WALKING WOUNDED
MINOR
R - 15-40 P - 2 M - AVPU
NO
YES
Brief Ventilatory Trial
POSITION AIRWAY
Between 15 40/min
Spontaneous Respirations?
40/min
NO
PERFUSION (Brachial/Radial Pulses)
YES
IMMEDIATE
IMMEDIATE
EXPECTANT
Absent
Present
Control Bleeding
MENTAL STATUS
IMMEDIATE
Responds to painful stimuli/unresponsive
Responds to Verbal
DELAYED
IMMEDIATE
11Triage Tags
- Wide range of features
- Many similarities
Maryland Emergency Medical Services
Maryland Department of Transportation
12Triage - Nerve Agents
- Immediate
- Unconscious or convulsing
- Involves two or more body systems (miosis does
not count)
Rapid intervention should result in a good
outcome
IMAGE SAIC
13Triage - Nerve Agents (contd)
- Delayed
- Initial symptoms are improving (miosis still
present) - Recovering well from pre-hospital antidote therapy
IMAGE SAIC
14Triage - Nerve Agents (contd)
- Minimal
- Walking and talking which indicates intact
breathing and circulation
- Expectant
- Cardiac or respiratory arrest
- Unconscious greater than 5 minutes
15Special Considerations
16Triage - Mustard
- Immediate
- Moderate to severe pulmonary symptoms
- Expectant
- 50 BSA burns by liquid
- Delayed
- 2 to 50 BSA burns by liquid
- Critical areas
- Eye involvement
- Minimal
17Triage - Cyanide (Inhalation)
- Immediate
- Symptoms are improving (mild HA, nausea,
vomiting, hyperventilation, and dizziness)
- Expectant
- Convulsions
- Apnea
- Sudden loss of consciousness
18Triage - Choking Agents
- Immediate
- Respiratory symptoms within 6 hours of exposure
(with ICU support)
- Delayed
- Respiratory symptoms more than 6 hours after
exposure
- Expectant
- Severe respiratory distress within 6 hours of
exposure (ICU support unavailable)
19Bomb Blasts
- Instantaneous chain of events in which an
explosive material is rapidly converted into a
gas under extremely high temperature and pressure
IMAGES DOD, USAF
20Bomb Blasts - Pressure Waves
IMAGE US Army
21Blast Mechanics
- High-energy explosives
- Detonate faster than the speed of sound (TNT,
diesel fuel, and fertilizer) - Low-energy explosives
- React slower than the speed of sound (pipe bomb)
- A solid surface acts as a reflective force (up to
9 times)
IMAGE FBI
22Explosive Properties
- The larger the explosive charge, the greater the
shock wave - Explosions generate multiple mechanisms for
injury or death as listed below - Direct exposure to the blast wave
- Reflective blast waves
- Acceleration-deceleration forces
- Penetrating and non-penetrating wounds
- Burns and inhalation of toxic gases
- Building collapse
23Mechanism Of Injury
- Primary Blast Injury - direct damage from the
blast wave - Secondary Blast Injury - from flying debris
- Tertiary Blast Injury - from being thrown against
a stationary object - Misc. Blast Effects - burns, crush injuries,
inhalation Of toxic gases, neuropsychiatric
conditions
24Injury Patterns
- Most survivors suffer secondary and tertiary
blast effects - Primary blast injury is infrequent in survivors
- The majority of survivors are treated and
released from the emergency department
IMAGE SAIC
25General Management
- ABCs
- Patients at risk for air embolism and
pneumothorax - Extensive surgical debridement of penetrating
foreign bodies with delayed wound closure - Foreign bodies must be collected for evidence
- Tetanus toxoid and antibiotics
IMAGE US Navy
26Bomb Blast - Triage
- Immediate
- Decreased or loss of hearing
- Short of breath
- Change in mental status
- Penetrating and traumatic injuries
- Minimal
- Walk and talk
- Alert and oriented
- Intact hearing
27Bomb Blast Special Considerations
- Bombs containing nuclear, biological, or chemical
materials - First responders should follow local SOPs
- Don appropriate PPE
- Survey area for contamination
- Decontaminate victims
- Irrigate and dress wounds
- Notify hospital about patient transport
IMAGE DOD
28Acute Crush Syndrome
- Produced by prolonged and continuous pressure on
extremities - Skeletal muscle death releases cellular toxins
- Results in renal failure, lethal cardiac
arrhythmias, and sudden death - Clinical presentation depends upon length of
time extremity has been crushed
IMAGE FEMA
29Acute Crush Syndrome Management
- Large volumes of IV normal saline before and
after victim is freed - 1 to 2 liter bolus (20 cc/kg) followed by 300 to
500 cc/hr (5 cc/kg/hr) - Maintains renal blood flow and urine excretion
- Sodium Bicarbonate
- Counteracts acidosis
- Limit effects of elevated potassium
IMAGE USAF
30Mass Fatalities Incident
- Any incident that will tax local resources
- Potential ethical responsibilities
- Reverence for deceased
- Treat deceased with dignity and respect
- Public (local, national, international) is
watching
IMAGE FEMA
31Preservation Documentation
- Law enforcement coroner/medical examiner
involved - Preservation and collection of all evidence
- Document
- Location of bodies and body parts
- Personal effects
- Surrounding environment
- Pictures of the area and evidence
32Documentation/Labeling
- Body bags, separate bags for unattached human
remains - Attach personal affects in a separate bag.
- Label, secure and document exact location
obtained - Drivers License, SSN (if available)
33Incident Morgue
- Convenient to scene
- Adequate capacity
- Secure
- Assure accessibility for vehicles
- Out of public observation
- Ventilation control
- Proper drainage
- Electrical availability
- Communication ability
34Mass Fatalities special considerations
- Separate sites identified for
- Family Assistance Center (FAC)
- Antemortem data collection, Notification, DNA
sample collection, child care - Chapel area
- Media
- Rehabilitation/Rest
- Adequate resources for victim families and
responders - Port-a-potties
- Water
35WMD Fatalities
- Potential for fatalities from hazardous
material/WMD incidents exists - Biochemical terrorism incident is a medical and
law enforcement issue - Protection for first responders, transport, and
autopsy personnel must be considered
36DMORT
- Specialty team
- Must be formally requested via state level
government - Paid by federal government
- Multiple resources
- Mobile incident morgue
IMAGE FEMA
37Fatality Recovery
- Obtain permission to move fatalities
- Determine location of fatalities, make a plan to
move fatalities to decontamination
site - Inspect, photograph, mark (identify by flags,
markers, numbers) exact location - Tag fatality with appropriate number/name, use
corresponding number on body bag after placing
in body bag - Correlate tag number with grid number on location
38Fatality Decontamination
- Purpose
- Minimize exposure/injury to responders
- Protect personnel
IMAGE SAIC
39Body Storage/Removal
- Refrigerated/cooler truck with metal floors
- No company names on trucks
- Use tarp to cover if necessary
- Verify that the body bag and body s match before
removal - Keep concise log
IMAGE FEMA
40Autopsy
- Autopsy
- Autopsy personnel should be briefed on agent
involved and don appropriate PPE - Confirm ID, tag s
- Once autopsy complete, wash internal
cavities/organs potentially exposed - ID and tag s remain in place
41Autopsy Hazards
- Infection transmission from direct inoculation
and aerosolization to persons in close proximity,
pathologists and assistants - Infectious airborne particles 1-5 microns in
diameter - Can travel on air currents
- Can be created by oscillating saws used at
autopsy - Rinse water sprayed on tissues
- Lung dissection
42Disposition of Remains
- Release from morgue
- Signed consent from next of kin authorizing
Funeral Home to retrieve deceased - Log date, time, name and funeral home name
- Release in body bag with IDs in place
- Funeral Home receives deceased from morgue in
body bag use appropriate universal/standard
precautions
43Mass Fatality - Summary
- Overwhelmed local resources
- Security
- Identification, documentation, preservation
- Personnel hazards, exposure risks
- Funeral home and embalming safety
44Summary
- Training will help bring order to an MCI
- Training must include
- Personal protective equipment (PPE)
- Patient decontamination
- Antidote therapy
- Joint agency hands - on and
table - top exercises
45Summary
- Minimize rescue attempts until scene is safe
- Utilize appropriate PPE
- Treatment areas should be secured, visible, and
accessible - Utilize one standard triage method
- Mass fatality preparation requires planning
46Summary
- Keep hospitals informed of the rescue operation
- Train frequently using realistic scenarios with
all responding agencies - Assessment, antidote therapy, and decontamination
may need to occur simultaneously
47Questions
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