Title: H1N1 and Pandemic Preparedness
1H1N1 and Pandemic Preparedness
- Pam Johnson, B.Sc. Pharm.
2Objectives
- Role of the Pharmacist
- Pandemic Action Plan
- Resources
- Pandemic Planning
- Up-to-date H1N1 Information
- Summary
3The Role of a Pharmacist
- Pharmacists are the most accessible front line
healthcare professionals - Critical role to play
- You can make a difference
4The Role of the Pharmacist
- Provide concise and up-to-date information to the
public - Alert public health officials of potential
outbreaks - Triage and patient referral, communication, and
planning
5The Role of the Pharmacist
- Triage and Patient Referral
- Ensure the sick stay away from the healthy
- Manage patients with minor illnesses
- Counsel and educate on symptoms
- What to watch for
- How to treat
- When to refer
6The Role of the Pharmacist
- Triage and Patient Referral
- Vaccinations
- Public health will lead the initiative
- Pharmacist responsibilities
- Screening
- Patient education
- Counseling and follow-up
- Reassess the dispensing process and technician
task allocation
7The Role of the Pharmacist
- Communication
- Maintain communication with public health and the
MPhA to ensure that we provide accurate
information to the public - Familiarize colleagues with your pandemic plan
- understand responsibilities before, during and
after a pandemic - Keep list of resources available for most current
information
8The Role of the Pharmacist
- Stay in touch with your community
- Be aware of regional planning initiatives
- Discuss how your pharmacy team will be involved
with these plans - Preparing is essential
- The more you are prepared, the better able you
are to cope with the economic, social and
environmental strains when the pandemic influenza
strikes
9Develop a Pandemic Plan
- What needs to be considered?
10Prevention
- Promote Health Strategies to Protect Patients,
Family Members and Yourself - Wash your hands and wash often
- Use alcohol-based hand rubs
- Frequent cleaning of surfaces
- Cough and sneeze into your arm
- Avoid touching eyes, nose, mouth
- Face masks
11Prevention
- Promote Health Strategies to Protect Patients,
Family Members and Yourself - Flu-like symptoms? STAY HOME
- Contact your physician
- If pregnant
- Have underlying health problems
- Experience shortness of breath
- Maintain healthy lifestyle
- Drink plenty of fluids and get lots of rest
- Do not share food or drinks
- Get a flu shot
- Be ready
12Public Education
- Recognize flu symptoms
- Adhere to prevention strategies
- Counsel patients how to avoid/treat flu
- Watch for patients seeking herbal remedies
- Distribute patient handouts
- Know when to refer
- Share your pandemic plan with colleagues
13Public Education - Useful Information
- Incubation Period
- 1-4 days, possibly up to 7 days
- Transmission
- 1 day before symptoms up to 7 days after symptom
onset - Worst Illness
- 1st 4 days for adults
- 3 days or less for children
- Hard Surfaces
- Lives 24-48 hours, infectious for only 2-8 hours
- Soft Surfaces
- Lives 8-12 hours, infectious for a few minutes
14Public EducationSymptoms of the Flu Virus (H1N1
and Seasonal)
- Almost always
- Sudden onset of fever and cough
- Common
- Fatigue
- Muscle aches
- Sore throat
- Headache
- Decreased appetite
- Runny nose
- Sometimes
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Diarrhea
15Public Education When Should you Refer?
16Public EducationSeverity Indicators
- See a Physician
- SHORTNESS OF BREATH at any time, rapid or
difficulty breathing - If symptoms become a lot worse over 2-3 days
- Chest pain
- Asthma symptoms worsen
- Bluish or grey skin color
17Public EducationSeverity Indicators
- See a Physician
- Bloody or coloured mucus/spit
- Sudden dizziness or confusion
- Severe or persistent vomiting
- High fever 3 days
- Low blood pressure
18Public EducationSeverity Indicators
- See a Physician
- Additional symptoms to watch for in children
- Fever does not subside with medication
- Lethargic, irritable
- Not eating/drinking
- Not waking up or interacting
19Labour
- Who will look after children if sick or if
schools are closed? - Who will care for the older adults?
- If 25 of the staff are sick, how will hours be
re-allocated? - Will colleagues be available to work during a
pandemic? - Are staff cross-trained on duties or available
from other parts of the business? - Contract relief available
-
20Hours of Operation
- Are current hours of operation sustainable?
- Plan in advance
- How will a change be communicated to the public ?
- Website, brochures/posters, flyers, IVR
- Rural locations
- One pharmacist stores are at risk
- How will patients get prescriptions?
- Central fill? Another store?
21Communication Protocol
- How will you provide updated information to
colleagues? - Email, Sharepoint
- Communicate with other pharmacies in the area as
well as health care workers - Maintain an up-to-date contact list
- Telephone, email, cell, emergency contact
- How will scheduling changes be communicated?
22Security
- Determine where emergency passwords will be
located or distributed - Computer, alarm codes, till passwords
- Access to the store/pharmacy
- Key to dispensary
- Lock and leave
- Narcotic cabinet
23Identify Critical Activities
- Prioritize Rxs
- How? Who comes first?
- How will this be communicated to employees?
- Counselling Priorities
- Antivirals? Antibiotics?
- Only those who have questions
- Counselling on chronic meds
- Determine operational priorities
- A diabetes educational event would not be a
priority during a pandemic event
24Inventory
- Maintain adequate supply of chronic medication
- Dont wait until the last minute
- Ensure your pharmacy is
- adequately stocked
- Review top 100 drugs and
- readjust reorder points
- Dont neglect the front store
- analgesics
- Province will intervene only if there is a
shortage of stock - a problem is not anticipated
25Vendors
- Vendors should prioritize pharmacy destinations
- Drivers should take deliveries directly to the
pharmacy if possible - What if local distribution center closes?
- How will delivery discrepancies impact your store?