| Literature DB >> 28794799 |
Kieran Michael Moore1,2, Nicholas Papadomanolakis-Pakis3, Adrienne Hansen-Taugher4, Tianxiu H Guan5, Brian Schwartz6,7, Paula Stewart8, Pamela Leece6,9, Richard Bochenek6.
Abstract
Given the steady rise of overdose morbidity and mortality in North America, and increasing frequency of sudden clusters of non-fatal and fatal overdoses in other jurisdictions, regional preparedness plans to respond effectively to clusters of overdoses may reduce the impact of such events on the population. On the 27th of February 2017 in Kingston, Ontario, KFL&A Public Health, in collaboration with public health partners, hosted a full-day workshop involving table-top exercises and discussions for service partners on how to prepare for, respond to, and manage a mass-casualty event secondary to opioid overdose in Southeastern Ontario. The workshop assisted in identifying the various challenges faced by service partners, provided an understanding of the roles and responsibilities of partner agencies, and helped to determine next steps in preparation to address a mass opioid overdose situation at the local level. This report suggests key roles and responsibilities of partners involved in responding to a mass-casualty event secondary to opioid overdose, recommendations to address the feedback and challenges raised throughout the workshop, and a protocol to help determine when to activate an Incident Management System (IMS).Entities:
Keywords: Emergency preparedness; Harm reduction; Incident management; Mass opioid overdose; Mass-casualty; Opioids; Overdose surge response; Public health; Surveillance
Year: 2017 PMID: 28794799 PMCID: PMC5547449 DOI: 10.1186/s12919-017-0076-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Proc ISSN: 1753-6561
Fig. 1Communication pathway for notifying the health system during an opioid overdose surge
Fig. 2Decision instrument to activate municipal/community control group and IMS. Adapted from the WHO (2008) International Health Regulations (2005) 2nd ed. [17]
Fig. 3Public health opioid overdose surge response utilizing a standard incident management structure
Fig. 4Public health opioid overdose surge response pathway