Title: ECRN Packet: Disaster Activity Responsibilities of the ECRN
1ECRN PacketDisaster 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
2Objectives
- 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
3Disaster 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
4IDPH 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)
5CMC - 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
6What 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
7Disaster 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 9Multiple 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
10Multiple 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
11Multiple 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!!!)
12Multiple 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
13Multiple 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 15Mass 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
16Mass 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 SOPs - Run reports are not necessary
17Field 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
18First 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!)
19The 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
20Activities 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
21Triaging 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
22METTAG SAMPLE
FRONT
BACK
23Disaster 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 lt 10 or gt 30
24Disaster 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
25Disaster 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
26Disaster 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)
27Hospital Use of Disaster Tags
- Disaster tag should become a permanent part of
the patients 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
28Resource 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
29ECRN 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
30ECRN 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
31ED 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
32Excessive 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
33Communication 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 hospitals
capabilities - Assists with transport management
- If casualties imply need for transfusions, may
need to coordinate with lab to notify LifeSource
for blood
34Communication 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
35Communication 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
36Receiving 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
- Doesnt help a mass casualty situation to say
youll accept a small number of patients -
everyone needs to think big and switch to
disaster mode of operating/thinking/responding
37Receiving 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
38Patient 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
39Communication
- 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)
40Medical 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
41Dispatch 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
42After 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
43After-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
45Internal Hospital Plan
- Better to call for additional help and turn them
away than not to have them and wish you did!
46Internal 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
47Hospital 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
48Additional 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
49Additional Resources
- RNs - especially experienced or comfortable in
the ED - MDs - based on nature of illness or injury
- Support personnel - clerks/secretaries/registrars
- Runners/transporters
- Persons to man phones
- Security - control flow of traffic
50CMC 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
51Hospital Disaster Plans
- Many principles and practices are generic across
most hospitals - Know where your hospital manual resources are
kept (usually close to the radio) - Where are your manuals and what do they look
like? - When is the last time you opened looked at
yours?
52CMC Paging of Disaster
- Code Green External
- influx of patients from external source
- Code Green Internal
- Need to recruit man-power for unusual activity
related to unusual working conditions - power outage
- lack of functioning emergency generators
- evacuation is needed
- need for all personnel on duty or off duty to be
called in - damage to patient care areas (ie flood, fire,
contamination)
53Manpower Resource Center
- Under direction of VP of Human Resources
- Located in patient Registration waiting area off
main lobby - Able to deploy staff to areas of need
- If called from home, hospital personnel respond
to this area (unless preassigned to respond
elsewhere) - ED staff called from home respond to the ED
Disaster charge nurse
54Manpower Resource Center and Additional Resources
- When you need additional help, you inform the
charge person for your area - Charge person needs to contact Command Center for
additional help - Additional help to be assigned as needed/requested
55Responding Staff Members
- If called from home
- Respond to area assigned or Manpower Resource
Center if none given - Wear hospital ID badge
- If on-duty at time of disaster page
- Return to your work unit
- Await reassignment if necessary
- Do not respond to an area unless assigned there
adds confusion and does not help tracking of
resources
56Security
- To control access points and flow of traffic by
foot and vehicle - onto the campus
- into the facility
- at key points within the building
57Internal Communication
- Walkie talkies are provided by Security
- Key persons need to have easy and quick access
for communication to each other - Communication support (ie walkie talkies) need
to be requested through the Command Center
58ED Charge RN
- Makes assignment of on-duty and responding staff
- Coordinates ED activity
- Communicate need for additional resources to the
Command Center - Need to continue to take care of non-disaster
involved patients that will still be arriving by
personal car and ambulance
59ECRN Radio Nurse
- Preferably have one person assigned to the radio
- continuity of conversation decreases missed and
mixed messages - Use runner to get messages to the Charge RN
- Keep Charge RN apprised of incoming messages
- Keep Triage RN apprised of incoming type and
number of patients
60Treatment Areas
- Triage
- At ambulance bay entrance
- Patients assigned a location based on condition
- Main ED
- Red, critically ill/injured patients
- Lower level dining room
- Additional treatment area for yellow and green
categorized patients
61Decontamination
- If 10 or less patients (lt10) can be provided in
the ED decon room - If more than 10 patients (gt10) to be provided in
the locker room at the Centre Club - Libertyville - Manpower Resource Center to disseminate supplies
as needed
62Infection Control
- Remember to consider proper use of PPEs
(personal protective equipment) based on the
situation - If patients are coughing, think of an airborne
problem - Provide and help place surgical masks on the
patient (surgical mask helps contain spread) - The medical personnel should also put on a mask
- The N95 mask will protect the medical provider
from inhaling microscopic matter
63Clerical Support
- Assigned to areas of need
- triage
- patient registration
- manning phones
- Registrars have patient chart packets at main
desk that need to be given out at Triage - Disaster log maintained
64Media
- Public Relations personnel to serve as liaison
between hospital and media - No staff member should provide ANY kind of
information to any persons not privileged to have
the information - Public Relations to coordinate with the Command
Center information being provided - Goal - keep media as far away as possible from
victims family
65System Wide Crisis Preparedness
- A Region X policy to enhance communication
between EMS System Resource Hospital, Associate
Hospital, EMS providers and community agencies - To be used for potential or actual area-wide
crisis such as - overcrowding events for patients with same or
similar signs and symptoms - weather related problems
- special events
66System Wide Crisis Preparedness
- Purpose of activating this plan is to help all
agencies involved be prepared for a crisis that
may impact any or all parties - ie summer heat wave in Chicago resulting in
large number of deaths - Any individual involved can identify a potential
or actual crisis - The agencies supervisor is contacted
- Resource Hospital EMS Coordinator or designee is
contacted
67System Wide Crisis Preparedness
- The decision is made to activate this policy
- POD hospital is notified (HPH for this area)
- POD hospital member will contact IDPH if
necessary - Communications continued between all applicable
parties
68Surge Capacity
- Remember to anticipate a larger number of victims
than you think you are getting - Not all patients come by ambulance where you
receive an advanced call - Many victims will self-transport (ie private
car) - Often, the worried well think they have
symptoms that they want evaluated - How are you going to handle this surge?
69- SO,,,,
- WHAT DO THESE DISASTER PLANS MEAN TO ME?
70Example 1
- Non-CMC sponsored fire department calls with
information regarding a disaster in their town
(ie Gurnee, Lake Villa, Highland Park,
Lincolnshire) - The ECRN should direct the fire department to
their Resource Hospital
71Example 1
- The respective Resource Hospital (ie Vista East
or Highland Park Hospital) would call potential
receiving hospitals (ie CMC, LFH) to report
pertinent information
72Example 2
- LFH receives a call from Lake Forest Fire that
they are responding to an incident involving 50
plus students from a local school overcome with
fumes - LFH should direct Lake Forest Fire Department to
contact CMC (Resource Hospital) with the
information and assistance with patient
distribution
73Example 3
- Lake Forest Fire calls Lake Forest Hospital with
report of 10 persons injured in a 2 vehicle
crash. - Lake Forest Hospital directs Lake Forest Fire to
contact the Resource Hospital (CMC) to assist in
patient distribution
74Example 4
- Grayslake Fire contacts CMC with information
regarding an incident involving 30 persons
injured in a bleacher collapse - CMC, as the Resource Hospital, will coordinate
location of receiving hospitals - CMC will also function as a receiving hospital
- Each hospital decides if they need to activate
their own internal disaster plan for resources
75Example 5
- A mass casualty incident occurs in the southern
end of Lake County - Highland Park Hospital (Resource Hospital for
that fire department) will be the communication
link between incident and receiving hospitals - HPH contacts CMC, LFH, and other indicated
hospitals to determine patient capabilities - HPH does the communication to the incident site
back and forth to hospitals
76Example 6
- Libertyville Fire Department responds to an
incident on the tollway involving 7 patients - Libertyville Fire Department calls CMC
- CMC can take all 7 victims
- No additional involvement with other receiving
facilities is necessary - CMC can handle all the
injuries with minimal use of some additional
resources in-house
77Example 7
- CMC receives a call from NWCH stating we are
going to be receiving patients from an incident
in Buffalo Grove - What is CMCs response?
- CMC is functioning as a receiving hospital
- Communication will occur through NWCH to the site
and NWCH to the receiving hospitals - CMC does not function as a Resource Hospital
- Communication to LFH would be from NWCH, if LFH
would be receiving patients
78Bottom line...
- Know where your Disaster Manuals are and how to
use them - Review the disaster manuals often enough to be
comfortable to respond without much prompting - Be familiar with your own facilities resources,
know who functions in the charge role, and know
how to get the disaster response activated