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Decontamination of Patients

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Remove and bag the patient's clothing and personal ... 1986 Chernobyl Accident 'When workers at Chernobyl who were in the reactor area at the time of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Decontamination of Patients


1
Decontamination of Patients
  • External
  • Skin
  • Wound
  • Internal
  • Decorporation agents

2
Patient Decontamination
  • Remove and bag the patients clothing and
    personal belongings (this typically removes 80 -
    90 of contamination)
  • Handle foreign objects with care until proven
    non-radioactive with survey meter
  • Survey patient and collect samples
  • Survey face, hands and feet
  • Survey rest of body
  • Note Avoid contamination of the probe.

3
External Contamination
  • Radioactive material (usually in the form of dust
    particles) on the body surface and/or clothing
  • Radiation dose rate from contamination is usually
    low, but while it remains on the patient it will
    continue to expose the patient and staff

4
External Contamination Remove with Showering
5
Decontamination Priorities
  • Wounds
  • Intact skin (areas of highest contamination
    first)
  • Change outer gloves frequently to minimize spread
    of contamination

6
Decontamination of Wounds
  • Contaminated wounds
  • Irrigate and gently scrub with surgical sponge
  • Debride surgically only as needed
  • Contaminated thermal burns
  • Gently rinse
  • Changing dressings will remove additional
    contamination
  • Avoid overly aggressive decontamination
  • Change dressings frequently

7
Decontamination of Skin
  • Use multiple gentle efforts
  • Use a mild soap water solution
  • Cut hair if necessary (do not shave)
  • Promote sweating
  • Plastic wrap, glove, etc.
  • Use survey meter

8
Cease Patient Decontamination
  • When decontamination efforts produce no
    significant reduction in contamination
  • When the level of radiation of the contaminated
    area is less than twice background
  • Before intact skin becomes abraded
  • Consider internal contamination

9
Internal Contamination
  • Radioactive material may enter the body through
  • - Inhalation
  • - Ingestion
  • - Wounds
  • Internal contamination generally does not cause
    early signs or symptoms
  • Internal contamination will continue to irradiate
    the patient

10
Treatment of Internal Contamination
  • Rare earths
  • - Plutonium
  • - Transplutonics
  • - Yttrium
  • Uranium
  • Cesium, rubidium, thallium
  • Tritium

11
Potassium Iodide (KI)
  • Only helpful in blocking thyroid gland
  • KI saturates the thyroid gland with stable iodine
  • KI must used prior to or within hours of exposure
    to radioactive iodine
  • See the FDA web site
  • Decorporation agent
  • Provide to Decon Team Members

www.fda.gov/cder/drugprepare/KI_QA.htm
12
Immediate Medical Management of Radiation Exposed
Patients
  • Triage
  • Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS)
  • localized/cutaneous
  • combined injury
  • Initial stabilization and treatment
  • Psychological effects
  • Record keeping/Dose assessment

13
Management - Priorities of Radiation Exposed
Patients
  • Standard medical triage is the highest priority
  • Radiation exposure and contamination are
    secondary considerations

14
Management Protocol of Radiation Exposed
Patients (Cont)
  • Based on
  • Injuries
  • Signs and symptoms
  • Patient history
  • Contamination survey

15
Prenatal Radiation Exposure
  • Human embryo and fetus highly sensitive to
    ionizing radiation
  • At higher doses, effects depend on dose and stage
    of gestation
  • Pregnant patients should receive special dose
    assessments and counseling
  • Information on prenatal radiation exposure
  • www.bt.cdc.gov/radiation/prenatalphysician.asp


16
Required Conditions forAcute Radiation Syndrome
  • Large dose
  • Penetrating
  • Most of body exposed
  • Acute

17
Never delay critical care because a patient is
contaminated
Acute Radiation Syndrome
18
1986 Chernobyl Accident
When workers at Chernobyl who were in the
reactor area at the time of the nuclear accident
were decontaminated, the medical personal at the
site received less than 10 mGy of
radiation. Mettler and Voelz, New England
Journal of Medicine, 2002 346 1554-61
19
Skin Effects
  • Epilation
  • Erythema
  • Pigmentation
  • Dry desquamation,
  • (Shedding, flaking off)
  • Moist desquamation that heals

NUREG / CR-4214, p II-68
20
Treatment of Large External Exposures
  • Treat patients symptomatically
  • Prevent and manage infections
  • Hematopoietic growth factors, e.g., GM-CSF, G-CSF
    (24-48 hr) (Neupogen)
  • Irradiated blood products
  • Antibiotics/reverse isolation
  • Electrolytes
  • More information on ARS
  • www.bt.cdc.gov/radiation/arsphysicianfactshee
    t.asp
  • Treat patients symptomatically
  • Prevent and manage infections
  • Hematopoietic growth factors, e.g., GM-CSF, G-CSF
    (24-48 hr) (Neupogen)
  • Irradiated blood products
  • Antibiotics/reverse isolation
  • Electrolytes
  • More information on ARS
  • www.bt.cdc.gov/radiation/arsphysicianfactshee
    t.asp

21
Treatment of Cutaneous Radiation Syndrome
  • Lesions do not appear for days to weeks
  • Perform surgical treatments within 48 hrs
  • Consult Radiation Emergency Assistance Center/
    Training Site (REAC/TS) for advice for further
    treatment, 865-576-1005 or www.orau.gov/reacts/

22
Dealing With Staff Stress
  • Preplanning
  • Establish information center
  • Train staff on radiation basics
  • Post Event
  • Debrief immediately after event
  • Offer counseling

23
Bomb Blast - Injury Patterns
  • Most survivors suffer secondary and tertiary
    blast effects
  • Primary blast injury is infrequent in survivors
  • 15 of survivors require hospital admission
  • The remaining are treated and released from the
    emergency department

24
Staff Preparedness
  • Plan for the needs of the unaffected population
  • Ratios range from 5-15 to 1
  • 5-15 worried well to 1 actual injured patient
  • This can paralyze your ED
  • Prepare to receive large numbers of casualties
  • Rotate staff to avoid congestion and fatigue
  • Monitor staff in chemical protective clothing
    equipment (CPCE)

25
Logistics/Supplies
  • Highest priority getting the right resources to
    the right place at the right time
  • Chemical protective clothing and equipment
  • Medications / antidotes / vaccines
  • Mechanical ventilators
  • Isolation rooms remote from other patients
  • Identify current inventory and augment as
    necessary
  • Develop a procedure to access external assets

26
Maximal Utilization of Hospital Space
  • Identify alternative medical treatment areas
  • Planning for use of available space
  • Open areas
  • Isolated areas
  • Temporary morgue
  • Conference room
  • Cafeteria
  • Physical Therapy

27
Handling of Evidence
  • Maintaining evidence is critical for an
    investigation
  • Clothing
  • Embedded foreign bodies
  • Decontamination runoff
  • Chain of Custody must be maintained

EVIDENCE
28
Table Top Exercise
  • Hospital Incident Management System (HIMS)
    Hands-on Exercise - Overview

29
Table Top Exercise
  • Hospital Incident Management System (HIMS)
    Hands-on Exercise - Report Out
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