Title: MCHC - University of Chicago Live Scenario Based Exercise
1MCHC - University of ChicagoLive Scenario Based
ExerciseTrain the Trainer
- Janis P. Tupesis, MD
- Mary Pat Olson, RN
- Susan Wood, RN
2Goals
- Overview
- MCHC
- Current Grant
- Incident Command
- NIMS
- HEICS
- Training
- Concept Train the trainers
- Clinical Scenario
- Review scenario and associated questions
- Integration with table top paperwork simulation
- Review and feedback
3ReviewCurrent Grant
4- Metropolitan Chicago Healthcare Council
- Service organization dedicated to improving the
health of the public by enhancing access to
health care and in assisting its members in
improving the delivery of services in the greater
Metropolitan Chicago Area - Comprised of more than 140 hospitals and health
care organizations - Hospitals, physician groups, nursing homes,
outpatient treatment centers, insurers, medical
schools and other health care organizations
Source MCHC Web site, www.mchc.org
5- Federal Bioterrorism Grants
- Initial grant awarded in November, 2003
- 1.04 million
- Basic Bioterrorism curriculum focus on nurses,
pharmacists and primary care physicians - More than 2,000 health care workers have been
trained by MCHC and its partners - Illinois Poison Center
- John H. Stroger Hospital of Cook County
- Mount Sinai Hospital
- Rush University Medical Center
- University of Illinois at Chicago
Source MCHC Web site, www.mchc.org
6- Federal Bioterrorism Grants
- Second grant awarded in October, 2005
- Expand the initial grant to special patient
populations - Sponsor local and statewide drills involving
- pre-hospital first responders
- emergency room personnel
- local and state public health agencies
- multiple hospitals
- Purpose to provide the health care workforce in
Illinois with the knowledge, skills, abilities
and core competencies to recognize, notify, treat
and participate in a multidisciplinary team
response in the event of a terrorist threat of
public health emergency
Source MCHC Web site, www.mchc.org
7Source MCHC Web site, www.mchc.org
8ReviewIncident Command
9The National Incident Management System (NIMS)
10Mandate for Change
- Post 9/11, perception of threats faced by U.S.
has changed - Increasing focus on terrorism threat while still
addressing spectrum of contingencies from natural
disasters to man-made hazards - Department of Homeland Security created to reduce
vulnerability of U.S. to terrorism - HSPD-5 issued in February 2003 to enhance ability
of the U.S. to manage domestic incidents. HSPD-5
requires - National Incident Management System (NIMS)
- National Response Plan (NRP)
11National Incident Management System
- NIMS guidance provides the national standard for
incident management - NIMS provides a framework for interoperability
and compatibility by balancing flexibility and
standardization - MAJOR COMPONENTS
- Incident Command and Management
- Preparedness
- Resource Management
- Communications and Information Management
- Supporting Technologies
- Ongoing Management and Maintenance
12NIMS Components
13NIMS What It Is / What Its Not
- NIMS is
- Core set of
- Doctrine
- Concepts
- Principles
- Terminology
- Organizational processes
- Applicable to all hazards
- NIMS is not
- An operational incident management plan
- A resource allocation plan
- A terrorism or WMD-specific plan
- Designed to address international events
14Relationship NIMS and NRP
NIMS aligns command, control, organization
structure, terminology, communication protocols,
resources resource-typing to synchronize all
levels of response
National Incident Management System (NIMS)
Used for all events
NRP integrates applies Federal resources,
knowledge and abilities before, during, and
after an incident
Incident
Resources
Local Response
Local Response
Knowledge
State Response or Support
Abilities
Federal Response or Support
National Response Plan (NRP)
Activated only forIncidents of National
Significance
15NIMS Command Management
- Incident Command System A standard, on-scene,
all-hazard incident management system designed to
integrate resources from numerous organizations
into a single structure using common terminology
and processes - Incident management activities organized under
five functions
16NIMS Command Management
Unified Command is a variation in incident
management structure, typically used when there
is more than one agency with responsibility for
an incident, or when the incident crosses
political jurisdictions.
Unified Command (Fire,
Police, EMS, Public Works)
Operations
Finance/Admin.
Logistics
Planning
17NIMS Command Management
Multiagency Coordination Systems typically are
established in Emergency Operations Centers
(EOCs) at the local and State levels.
Other entities are established at the Federal
regional and national levels.
18NIMS Command Management
- Public Information Systems are essential for
communicating timely and accurate information to
the public during emergency situations - Public Information Officer
- Joint Information System
- Joint Information Center
19NIMS Preparedness
- Preparedness
- Continuous cycle of planning, training,
equipping, exercising, evaluating and taking
corrective action, in advance of any potential
incident - Preparedness Planning
- Training Exercises
- Personnel Standards
- Equipment Standards
- Publications Management
- Mutual Aid Agreements
Components of NIMS
20NIMS Resource Management
- Resource Management
- Uniform methods of identifying,acquiring,
- allocating, and tracking resources
- Classifying kinds and types of resources
- Incorporating resources contributed by
- private sector and non-governmental
- organizations
- Using a credentialing system tied to
- uniform training and certification
- standards
Components of NIMS
21NIMS Communication
- Communications and Information Management
- Common operating picture
- Common communications and data standards
Components of NIMS
- Supporting Technologies
- Provide capabilities essential to incident
management - Operational scientific support
- Technical standards
- RD to solve operational
- problems
22NIMS Management/Maintenance
- Ongoing Management and Maintenance
-
- Strategic direction and oversight
- Continual review and refinement
- NIMS Integration Center
Components of NIMS
Download NIMS guidance document at NIMS web page
www.fema.gov/nims
23Supporting Organizations
24HEICSThe Hospital Emergency IncidentCommand
System
- HEICS is an emergency management system which
employs a logical management structure, defined
responsibilities, clear reporting channels, and a
common nomenclature to help unify hospitals with
other emergency responders. - The Hospital Emergency Incident Command System
is the standard by which the medical community
has found success and common ground in the area
of disaster management.
25HEICSThe Hospital Emergency IncidentCommand
System
- HEICS is fast becoming the standard for health
care disaster response and offers the following
features - predictable chain of management
- flexible organizational chart allows
- flexible response to specific emergencies
- prioritized response checklists
- accountability of position function
26(No Transcript)
27Because of the numbers and kinds of emergencies
that can impact a hospital, most begin planning
with a basic infrastructure...
28Incident CommandCommand CenterDefines the
mission and ensures its completion.
29Logistics
30LogisticsProvides for a working environment and
adequate materials to meet the overall medical
objective.
31Planning
32PlanningDetermines and provides for the
continuance of each medical objective. Prompts
and drives all HEICS officers to develop short-
and long-range action plans.
33Finance
34FinanceProvides funding for present medical
objective and stresses facility-wide
documentation to maximize financial recovery and
reduction of liability.
35Operations
36OperationsCarries out the medical objective to
the best of the hospitals ability.
37Review - Incident Command
- Strengths
- Organized and systematic chain of command
- Clear objectives for individual participants
- Uniform terminology for identifying resources and
organizational functions - Mutually recognized structures for all levels
- Institutional
- Local
- State
- National
- Weaknesses
- Lack of understanding of modular organizational
structure (command structure and roles) - Poor adherence to assigned roles
- Ineffective resource mobilization
- Inconsistency between various agencies
- Ineffectiveness in integrating non-governmental
agencies (relief agencies and NGOs)
38Review - Incident Command
- Opportunities
- Promoting ICS as the standardized model of
management - Implement an ongoing systems evaluation process
- Promote multi-disciplinary drilling and
preparation
- How do we do this?
- Review ICS structure
- Review hospital based ICS structure
- Educate pre-hospital personnel
- Educate hospital personnel
- Educate and train the trainers well!
39ReviewMethodology
40Review
- Concept Train the Trainers
- Used in
- Medicine
- Education
- Business
- Goal enabling teachers (you) to develop their
ability to help students (providers) to learn
41Review - Training
- Strengths
- Ability for trainers to help their students to
learn - Pay it forward theory exponential growth - 1
course teaches 5 instructors who implement it to
100 students - Well developed methodology in medicine, education
and business
- Weaknesses
- Difficult to assure standardized quality
- Variability in downstream effects - teaching,
transmitting info quickly, effectively and
efficiently to target audience - Difficult to evaluate - no test on teaching
- Rely on feedback from participants
42Review - Training
- Opportunities
- Training the trainers - courses like this one
- Giving the people who will be directly teaching
scenarios the educational tools to succeed - Potential to have hundreds trained from one
course
- How do we do this?
- Train small group of people well
- Easily understandable and reproducible clinical
scenario - Organized, standardized table top type of
exercise - Effective teaching materials - written and
multimedia - Encourage Feedback
43ReviewClinical Scenario
44Clinical Scenario
Learning Objectives
- Identify some of your organizations current
strengths and gaps - Review and list the various roles, functions, and
procedures involved in ICS activation - Identify issues relevant to mass victim
scenarios, e.g., policies, resources,
communication, coordination, data management, and
mental health needs
45Clinical Scenario
Purpose of Real Time Drills
- Emphasis on training and learning, not
testinghelps prepare participants for a
full-scale or functional exercise - Evaluation of current systems, response plans
- Provides practice for integrating pre-hospital to
hospital communications and operations
46Clinical Scenario
Exercise Logistics
- Suggested Schedule
- Introduction (5 minutes)
- Exercise (40 minutes)
- Debriefing (15 minutes)
- Roles
- Participants
- Facilitator
- Note taker
- (Observers)
47Clinical Scenario
Instructions to Remember
- Assume scenario is real make best decisions
based on available information - Play your department, agency, or community role
throughout the exercise - Consider policy issues as well as specific
procedures - Focus on identifying system gaps and strengths
rather than individual knowledge - Take notes for the debriefing discussion(e.g.,
gaps/strengths in resource planning,
communication, information management)
48Clinical Scenario
Day 1 Tuesday, August 17, 2004 The Setting
- Evergreen County
- Population 2 million residents
- Tourists approximately 8.5 millionovernight
visitors per year - Evergreen Square Mall
- 1.3 million sq. ft.
- Approximately 44,000visitors per day
49Clinical Scenario
Day 1 Tuesday, August 17, 2004 Suspicious
Behavior
Sarah Jones and her sister observe a
suspicious-looking man spraying some material in
the corridors and food court area at Evergreen
Square Mall.
- He is wearing a cap and sunglasses and using a
hand-held aerosol dispersion device.
50Clinical Scenario
Day 1 Tuesday, August 17, 2004 Alerting
Authorities
- The women file a report with a mall security
guard, noting the suspicious behavior, and
promptly leave the premises. - The suspect, having fled the scene, cannot be
apprehended for questioning. - The mall security guard initiates investigation
and notifies law enforcement officials.
- Surveillance cameras verify the womens report of
suspicious behavior.
51Clinical Scenario
Day 1 Tuesday, August 17, 2004 Initial Response
- The HAZMAT team and law enforcement officials
arrive on the scene and secure the area.
- Handheld assays yield preliminary results within
two hours, suggesting that an anthrax exposure
has occurred.
52Clinical Scenario
Day 1 Tuesday, August 17, 2004 Situation
Develops
- Samples of the agent are collected for more
sensitive and specific confirmatory testing at
the state lab. Results will take1-2 days. - Shoppers leave Evergreen Square Mall with their
purchases, many eager to sharenews of the
commotionwith friends and family.
53Clinical Scenario
Day 2 Wednesday, August 18, 2004 Confirmatory
Results
- The state lab confirms anthrax as agent in
question.
- The local health officer (LHO)activates the
Public HealthEmergency Operations Plan. - Emergency Operations Center (EOC) activates.
- The LHO evaluates the need for mass dispensing
operations and SNS resources.
54Clinical Scenario
Day 4 Friday, August 20, 2004 Initial Contact
- The family of Alisa Brown, a 33 year old clerk,
calls 911 with a complaint of the patient having
abdominal pain. - Upon arrival, EMS providers find the patient
feverish, with abdominal pain, vomiting and
diarrhea. - Mrs. Browns elderly mother-in-law and 2 year old
daughter will accompany her to the hospital.
55Clinical Scenario
Day 4 Friday, August 20, 2004 Initial Response
- EMS RESPONSE
- Personal Protective Gear
- Universal Precautions
- Further patient history
- Initiate medical treatment and transport to the
hospital - Medical Control
56Clinical Scenario
Day 4 Friday, August 20, 2004 Hospital -
Arrival
- INITIAL ER RESPONSE
- Mrs. B and her 2 family members arrive at the
hospital and are placed in a treatment room. - Grandma Brown gives a history of being at the
shopping mall a few days ago when all the
commotion broke out. - Grandmother and child appear to have localized
raised rashes on hands arms and neck with severe
itching.
57Clinical Scenario
Questions
- Would you notify the local health department?
- Would you notify the Public Health Emergency
Operations Center? - Is there a need to communicate any information to
response partners, hospitals, the public?
Note Consider using HEICS Activity Log Sheet at
this time
58Clinical Scenario
Day 5 Saturday, August 21, 2004 Situation
Expanding
- The local EOC reports to your hospital that
several surrounding EDs are seeing 10-12
patients each with signs of cutaneous and
gastrointestinal anthrax. - A quick review patient charts in the waiting room
reveals 6-7 more patients with suspicious
presenting symptoms.
59Clinical Scenario
Assessment and Notifications
Questions
- What are priority actions for local EMS systems
at this time? - What are priority actions for hospitals at this
time?
Note Consider using HEICS Activity Log Sheet at
this time
60Clinical Scenario
Day 5 Saturday, August 21, 2004 Recognition
- The hospital administrator decides to initiate
the HEICS disaster plan - The incident commander is notified of the
increasing volume of patients in ED as well as in
the surrounding hospitals - The ED attending MD relays treatment plans for
exposed patients according to systems affected
61Clinical Scenario
Questions
- Where is the best staging and patient care areas
for potentially exposed /affected patients? - What additional information should be relayed to
the hospital incident commander? - What types of security measures would you need to
plan for in the pre-hospital arena? - What types of security measures would you need to
plan for at the hospital?
62Clinical Scenario
Day 6 Sunday, August 22, 2004 Day Six
- After 24 hours, 72 cases of affected or exposed
patients have been reported to the Local Health
Officer - EOC reports an onslaught of 911 calls
- Worried well are showing up at EDs through the
metro area in droves. Your ED daily census is
double its usual - The media is giving the story heavy media play
63Clinical Scenario
Day 6 Sunday, August 22, 2004 Panic
- One patient becomes very agitated when he is
informed that he did not meet the criteria for
credible exposure, but he is demanding that he
receive the medication. - Several other patients in the waiting area are
becoming anxious just observing this individual.
Staff and patients exhibit signs and symptoms of
stress during this incident
64Clinical Scenario
Day 6 Sunday, August 22, 2004 Panic
- Ambulance personnel report being prohibited from
leaving response scenes and of being swamped on
the street by people demanding care
65Clinical Scenario
Questions - Patient Anxiety
- How would you handle these patient scenarios?
- What kinds of mental health problems would you
need to plan for in the pre-hospital arena? - What kinds of mental health problems would you
need to plan for at the hospital?
Note Consider using HEICS Activity Log Sheet at
this time
66Clinical Scenario
Questions - Security
- What types of security measures would you need to
plan for in the pre-hospital arena? - What types of security measures would you need to
plan for at the hospital?
Note Consider using HEICS Activity Log Sheet at
this time
67Clinical Scenario
Questions - Data Management
- What types of data should be collected for
surveillance? - Where can a health care provider go to get the
latest information on anthrax?
Note Consider using HEICS Activity Log Sheet at
this time
68Clinical Scenario
Questions - Demobilization
- Who makes the decision to return to normal
operations and to discontinue the NIMS/HEICS
plans? - Who should provide input into this decision?
- What criteria should be considered?
Note Consider using HEICS Activity Log Sheet at
this time
69Review - Clinical Scenario
- Strengths
- Modular organizational structure
- Defines common goals
- Able to examine the relationships in different
stages of the care process - Able to give real time feedback
- Able to evaluate using pre-post test questions.
- Weaknesses
- Variable quality in teaching
- Variable quality in assessment
- Difficult to evaluate communication between
players
70Review - Clinical Scenario
- Opportunities
- Turning down time into clinical learning time
- Better learning assessment instruments for use in
clinical settings - Capitalize on information technology resources
- How do we do this?
- Routine scheduling of clinical scenario practices
- Regularly scheduled review and updating scenarios
- Develop training personnel for wide spread
educational opportunities
71Wrap Up Slide!
- Special Thanks to
- You - participants!
- MCHC
- University of Chicago Hospitals
- Dr. Cai Glushak, MD
- Dr. Sonja Callejas, MD
- Dr. Jim Walter, MD
- Unique Washington, U of C
- Donna Jasutis, U of C
72References
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Anthrax and Interim Guidelines for Exposure
Management and Anti-microbial Therapy, October
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73Acknowledgements
- Andy Stergachis, PhD, RPh, Northwest Center for
Public Health Practice - Jeff Duchin, MD, Chief, Communicable Disease
Control, Public Health Seattle King County - Michael Loehr, Section Manager, Public Health
Seattle King County - Dean Webb, RPh, Chief of Pharmacy, Public Health
Seattle King County - Yuzo Arima, MPH Candidate, University of
Washington - Kate Wetmore, MPH Candidate, University of
Washington - Dave Owens, State Strategic National Stockpile
Coordinator, Department of Health, State of
Washington - UW and NWCPHP Faculty and Staff Randy Beaton,
PhD, Bryant Karras, MD, Marcus Nemuth, MD, Judith
Yarrow, MA, and Connie Curran, MA - Online CDC.gov, NIMSONLINE.com, FEMA.gov