| Literature DB >> 16137391 |
Abstract
The Omagh bombing in August 1998 produced many of the problems documented in other major incidents. An initial imbalance between the demand and supply of clinical resources at the local hospital, poor information due to telecommunication problems, the need to triage victims and the need to transport the most severely injured significant distances were the most serious issues. The Royal Group Hospitals Trust (RGHT) received 30 severely injured secondary transfers over a 5-hour period, which stressed the hospital's systems even with the presence of extra staff that arrived voluntarily before the hospital's major incident plan was activated. Many patients were transferred to the RGHT by helicopter, but much of the time the gained advantage was lost due to lack of a helipad within the RGHT site. Identifying patients and tracking them through the hospital system was problematic. While the major incident plan ensured that communication with the relatives and the media was effective and timely, communication between the key clinical and managerial staff was hampered by the need to be mobile and by the limitations of the internal telephone system. The use of mobile anaesthetic teams helped maintain the flow of patients between the Emergency Department and radiology, operating theatres or the intensive care unit (ICU). The mobile anaesthetic teams were also responsible for efficient and timely resupply of the Emergency Department, which worked well. In the days that followed many victims required further surgical procedures. Coordination of the multidisciplinary teams required for many of these procedures was difficult. Although only seven patients required admission to adult general intensive care, no ICU beds were available for other admissions over the following 5 days. A total of 165 days of adult ICU treatment were required for the victims of the bombing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16137391 PMCID: PMC1269428 DOI: 10.1186/cc3502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Patient flow after the explosion. TCH, Tyrone County Hospital; RGHT, Royal Group Hospitals Trust; ED, Emergency Department; RBHSC, Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children; GICU, general intensive care unit; CSICU, cardiac surgical intensive care unit; PICU, paediatric intensive care unit.
Admitting units and outcome of patients
| Admitting unit | Number of patients | Additional information | Outcome |
| ICU | 7 | Burns (2), head injury (3), orthopaedics/ophthalmic surgery (1), vascular/orthopaedics/neurosurgery (1) | 6 survived, 1 deceased |
| Burns | 3 | Survived | |
| Neurosurgery | 5 | Survived | |
| Orthopaedics | 6 | Survived | |
| Thoracic surgery | 1 | Survived | |
| Ophthalmic surgery | 4 | Enucleation (2), bilateral enucleation (1) | Survived |
| Children's hospital | 3 | ICU/abdominal injury, ICU/burns, burns | Survived |
| Emergency Department/ vascular general surgery | 1 | Abdominal injury – laparotomy in resuscitation room | Deceased |
ICU, intensive care unit.
The system's response to bombing: strengths and weaknesses
| Strengths in system's response | Weaknesses in system's response |
| Clinical staff going to Omagh to help initial response | External communications poor and no back-up with ACCOLC during telephone blackout |
| Distribution of victims between four hospitals for initial care | No direct communication between ambulance and hospitals |
| Triggering of the MIP at the RGHT without waiting for absolute proof that it was required | Delayed realization of the use of ambulance control to relay communication between TCH and the RGHT |
| Utilization of day-shift staff and night-shift staff at the RGHT and having replacements for later in the incident response | Internal communication reliant on overloaded internal telephone system and face-to-face meetings |
| Public Relations staff tasked with ensuring good quality, timely information for relatives | Little communication between hospitals regarding victims' identity and status (for families with victims in more than one hospital) |
| Appropriate triage of small number of patients for tertiary care to regional center | Advantages of helicopter negated by lack of previous experience and no helipad at regional center |
| Availability of all trauma-related specialties on one site at the RGHT | GICU busy initially, discharging and transferring patients to vacate beds. Too few beds in system for a larger incident |
| Single portal of entry to the RGHT to avoid missed injury and direct admission to surgical wards | Patient identity mistaken due to early acceptance of spurious information |
| System for tracking patients in regional centre not used by surgical teams for follow-up |
ACCOLC = access overload control for cellular radio telephones; GICU, general intensive care unit; MIP, major incident plan; RGHT, Royal Group Hospitals Trust; TCH, Tyrone County Hospital.