Title: Multi-Casualty
1Multi-Casualty
Incident Plan
2007 Training
FIRE-EMS TRAINING Contra Costa County EMS
2Tim W. HennessyMCI Plan
- Tim W. Hennessy
- Communications Supervisor
- Contra Costa County
- Sheriffs Communication
- 1975-2007
-
- This MCI Plan
- is dedicated to Tim.
- His expertise and commitment in developing this
plan was invaluable.
3History
- 1979 First MCI Committee organized to develop
plan following Yuba City bus crash in Martinez - 1983 Board of Supervisors approved the first MCI
Plan - Several revisions to the basic plan since 1983
4Current MCI Working Group
- Appointed in 2005 to conduct a ground-up rewrite
of the MCI Plan - Multidisciplinary
- Fire
- Emergency Ambulance Zone Provider (public and
private) - Law Enforcement
- Hospitals
- Public Safety Communications
- EMS Agency staff
5Why Rewrite the Plan?
- Improve the usefulness of the document for first
responders - Compare the Plan to the Countys current risk
profile - Compare the Plan to the Countys current public
safety and EMS resources
6Why Rewrite the Plan?
- Attempt to resolve weaknesses in the Plan
experienced during previous incidents - Incident command and control
- Communication flow
- Resource ordering and tracking
- Ensure compliance with NIMS
7MCI Plan Objectives
Objective 1 Establish a common organization,
management, and communications structure for the
coordination of emergency response to a
multi-casualty incident.
8MCI Plan Objectives
Objective 2 Establish methods of triage and
transportation that will provide the best medical
outcome possible for the greatest number of
casualties.
9MCI Plan Objectives
Objective 3 Establish pre-defined
responsibilities of all entities with key roles
in achieving successful implementation of the
plan.
10MCI Plan Objectives
Objective 4 The Plan will be drilled regularly,
and reviewed annually and following significant
activations of the Plan as directed by the EMS
Director.
11Key Concepts
- Use of Incident Command System
- Expansion and contraction of structure is dynamic
and incident-driven - Use of single point ordering for resource
requests - Emphasis on exchanging information
12Key Concepts
- Importance of Unified Command
- The Rule of 2 and 4
13MCI Tiers
- Plan consolidates Expanded Medical Emergencies,
Medical Advisory Alerts and MCIs into a single
MCI Plan with 4 activation tiers - Use of tiered MCI Plan reinforces the scalability
of the Plan
14MCI Tiers
- Use of Tiers modeled after Community Warning
System Levels - Consistent with best practices
15Tier Zero
- Notification of incident with potential to
escalate to a higher tier (Medical Advisory
Alert) - CWS Level II and III Incidents
- Report of Active Shooter incident
- Attempted emergency landing of passenger aircraft
16Tier One
- 6-10 patients with scene contained, number of
patients not expected to rise - Multi-vehicle collision
- Multiple gunshot victims at contained scene and
no ongoing active shooter
17Tier Two
- 10 50 patients or less than 10 patients with
substantial chance of increase in number of
patients - Transportation resource ordering switches to
EMSOACC - Petrochemical incident
- Passenger train derailment
- Active shooter with uncontained scene
18Tier Three
- More than 50 patients or reasonable expectations
of large number of casualties - Actual or suspected WMD incident
- Significant explosion in populated area
- Emergency evacuation of hospital or SNF
19Plan Components
- Responsibilities matrix/checklists
- Communications flowchart
- Communications overview
- ICS position checklists
- ICS communications forms 205 and 217A
20Responsibilities Matrix
- Review pertinent matrices
- Pp 7 - 16
21MCI Checklists
- Common Responsibilities
- Back of each checklist
- Get Assignment
- Check In
- Get Briefed
- Get work materials
- Undertake mission safely
- Organize and brief subordinates
- Assure comms
- Use clear text
- Complete forms
- Demobilize as required/practical
22Unit Leader Responsibilities
- Back of each checklist
- Participate in planning as required
- Get accurate SitStat/ReSTat of assigned units
- Confirm arrival time of resources
- Assign duties to subordinates as required
- Develop accountability, safety and security
- Supervise demobilization
- Provide logistics with re-supply needs
- Maintain unit log
23Packaging of MCI Plan
- Standard Packaging
- Hand out bundles
- You are the checklist until you delegate it
- Morgue Manager-Law enforcement
- Certs/Quals determine who does whatnot rank or
position
24Personnel Options
- Branch Director
- Chief Officer(Fire)/Lieutenant/Captain (Law)
- EMS/Pt Transport Group Supervisors
- Captain (Fire)/Sergeant (Law)/Supervisor(EMS)
- Triage/Treatment/Transport Unit Leaders
- Captain(Fire)/Sergeant(Law)/Supervisor(EMS)
25Transportation Group Supervisor/Unit Leader
- Only one per incident
- If a Single EMS Group Supervisor
- Reports to the EMS group supervisor
- If multiple EMS Group Supervisors
- Reports to the EMS Branch Director/Ops
- Single Staging area for ground transport units
- Single Helispot for air transport units
26Transportation Highlights
- 2/4 Concept
- Continue to disperse casualties as much as
possible - Use farther hospitals first
- Especially if potential exists for walk ins
- Hospital polling whenever possible but certainly
after 2/4 has been maximized - Coordinate with EMSOACC as much as possible
27Transportation Highlights (cont)
- Emergency Ambulance Zone Providers still
responsible for normal coverage too - If limited ambulances, minors can be transported
by other means - Tier 2 3 suspend ambulance to hospital comms
- PCRs
- Whenever possible PCRs shall be completed
- Tier 3 Branch( or designee) can suspend standard
PCR protocol and replace with triage tag info - Triage tags are minimum level of documentation
28Predetermined Staging Areas
- East/Central/West
- Rallying point in case of loss of communications
29Example of Tier 1 Scenario
- MVA with 7 patients in 3 vehicles
- Single Medical Group
- Transportation reports to Med Grp Sup
- Triage patients and treat where they were found
- Do not send all patients to same hospital
- Can use close hospital due to lack of probability
of self transporting patients to closest facility
30Example of Tier 2 Scenario
- Shooting incidents with 21 patients
- Single Medical Group
- Transportation reports to Med Grp Sup
- Triage patients where they are found
- Litter bearers move patients to specific
treatment areas - Patients re-triaged in treatment areas and
assigned priority for transport - Avoid close proximity hospitals if possible due
to potential private transport arrivals
31Example of Tier 3 Scenario
- Large structural collapse with multiple victims
trapped over a widespread area - Multiple Medical Groups (probably by Division)
report to Medical Branch - Transportation reports to Medical Branch
- Still just one transportation staging area
- Triage patients where they are found
- Litter bearers move patients where they are found
- Patients re-triaged in Treatment areas and
assigned priority - Maximize 2/4 concept as needed
32(No Transcript)
33Triage Considerations
- START Triage system
- BLS personnel perfect for this
- Utilize teams whenever possible
- Good mission for an Engine Company
- Minimal Treatment
- Do not re-triage at scene
- Can re-triage in Treatment Areas
34Triage Considerations (cont)
- Patients can be upgraded or downgraded
- New tag if not written on
- Fold old tag and give new one if started writing
patient info on it - ?Who providers litter bearers
- PT TX Unit Leader
- DOAs stay where found unless need for movement
necessitates taking them to a morgue location - Patients may not be moved to a Tx Area
- MVAs with limited number of victims
35START and Tag Review