| Literature DB >> 15332068 |
John L Hick1, Dan Hanfling, Jonathan L Burstein, Craig DeAtley, Donna Barbisch, Gregory M Bogdan, Stephen Cantrill.
Abstract
Recent terrorist and epidemic events have underscored the potential for disasters to generate large numbers of casualties. Few surplus resources to accommodate these casualties exist in our current health care system. Plans for "surge capacity" must thus be made to accommodate a large number of patients. Surge planning should allow activation of multiple levels of capacity from the health care facility level to the federal level. Plans should be scalable and flexible to cope with the many types and varied timelines of disasters. Incident management systems and cooperative planning processes will facilitate maximal use of available resources. However, resource limitations may require implementation of triage strategies. Facility-based or "surge in place" solutions maximize health care facility capacity for patients during a disaster. When these resources are exceeded, community-based solutions, including the establishment of off-site hospital facilities, may be implemented. Selection criteria, logistics, and staffing of off-site care facilities is complex, and sample solutions from the United States, including use of local convention centers, prepackaged trailers, and state mental health and detention facilities, are reviewed. Proper pre-event planning and mechanisms for resource coordination are critical to the success of a response.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15332068 PMCID: PMC7118880 DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2004.04.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Emerg Med ISSN: 0196-0644 Impact factor: 5.721
Definitions.
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Surge capacity | Ability to manage a sudden, unexpected increase in patient volume (ie, numbers of patients) that would otherwise severely challenge or exceed the current capacity of the health care system |
| Surge capability | Ability of the health care system to manage patients who require specialized evaluation or interventions (eg, contaminated, highly contagious, or burn patients) |
| Public health surge capacity | Ability of the public health system to increase capacity not only for patient care but also for epidemiologic investigation, risk communication, mass prophylaxis or vaccination, mass fatality management, mental health support, laboratory services, and other activities |
| Facility-based surge capacity | Actions taken at the health care facility level that augment services within the response structure of the health care facility; may include responses that are external to the actual structure of the facility but are proximate to it (eg, medical care provided in tenting on the hospital grounds). These responses are under the control of the facility's incident management system and primarily depend on the facility's emergency operations plans. |
| Community-based surge capacity | Actions taken at a community level to supplement health care facility responses. These may provide for triage and initial treatment, nonambulatory care overflow, or isolation (eg, off-site “hospital” facility). These responses are under the control of the jurisdictional response (eg, public health, emergency management) and represent a public effort to support and augment the health care system. |
Figure 1Key community and regional stakeholders.
Tiers of health care disaster response.
| Response Tier | Response Scope | Response Role |
|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | Individual health care facility | Facility-based “surge in place” response |
| Tier 2 | Health care coalition | Multiple facility response using facility and coalition agreements/plans |
| Tier 3 | Jurisdictional incident management | Community response, coordination at emergency operations center |
| Tier 4 | Regional incident management | Cooperation between jurisdictions/coalitions |
| Tier 5 | State response | Support to jurisdictions |
| Tier 6 | Federal response | Support to state |
Figure 2Potential alternative care sites.
Figure 3Factors to consider in alternative care site selection.
Figure 4System examples.