| Literature DB >> 30776874 |
Kyung Don Yoo1,2, Hyo Jin Kim1,2, Yunmi Kim2, Jae Yoon Park1,3, Sung Joon Shin1,3, Seung Hyeok Han4, Dong Ki Kim5,6, Chun Soo Lim5,7, Yon Su Kim5,6.
Abstract
In 2016 and 2017, there were earthquakes greater than 5.0 in magnitude on the Korean Peninsula, which has previously been considered an earthquake-free zone. Patients with chronic kidney disease are particularly vulnerable to earthquakes, as the term "renal disaster" suggests. In the event of a major earthquake, patients on hemodialysis face the risk of losing maintenance dialysis due to infrastructure disruption. In this review, we share the experience of an earthquake in Pohang that posed a serious risk to patients on hemodialysis. We review the disaster response system in Japan and propose a disaster preparedness plan with respect to hemodialysis. Korean nephrologists and staff in dialysis facilities should be trained in emergency response to mitigate risk from natural disasters. Dialysis staff should be familiar with the action plan for natural disaster events that disrupt hemodialysis, such as outages and water treatment system failures caused by earthquakes. Patients on hemodialysis also need to be educated about disaster preparedness. In the event of a disaster situation that results in dialysis failure, patients need to know what to do. At the local and national government level, long-term preparations should be made to handle renal disaster and patient safety logistics. Moreover, Korean nephrologists should also be prepared to manage cardiovascular disease and diabetes in disaster situations. Further evaluation and management of social and national disaster preparedness of hemodialysis units to earthquakes in Korea are needed.Entities:
Keywords: Disasters; Earthquakes; Renal dialysis; South Korea
Year: 2019 PMID: 30776874 PMCID: PMC6481979 DOI: 10.23876/j.krcp.18.0058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Res Clin Pract ISSN: 2211-9132
Damages and injuries in recent Asian-Pacific region earthquakes
| Nation | No. of overall deaths | No. of deaths in chronic HD patients | No. of chronic HD patients transferred to other facilities | No. of crush syndrome/acute dialysis patients | No. of acute HD sessions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kobe (Japan, 1995) | 6,400 | 23 | 3,000 | 5% of all hospitalized patients/ NA | 100 | [ |
| Marmara (Turkey, 1999) | 17,480 | 6/356 | NA | 639/477 | 5,137 | [ |
| Chi-Chi (Taiwan, 1999) | 2,405 | 8/1,500 | NA (54 of 78 HD centers had normal scheduling, 12 of 78 centers were restored within 3 days) | 95/32 | [ | |
| Kashmir (Pakistan, 2005) | 73,000 | NA | NA | 88/55 | 807 | [ |
| GEJE (Japan, 2011) | 20,352 | NA | 10,906 | NA | NA | [ |
It was difficult to determine the exact number of deaths among hemodialysis (HD) patients.
This is the number of deaths identified among the HD maintenance patients reported in the reporting area. NA, not available; GEJE, Great East Japan Earthquake.
Available internet websites for hemodialysis units and dialysis patients as of May 2018
| Proper situation | Organization | List of titles | Available URL | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Disaster preparedness (United States) | Kidney Community Emergency Response Coalition (KCER) | ‘KCER Program: Annual Summary’ | [ | |
| ‘Disaster preparedness: a guide for chronic dialysis facilities – second edition’ | ||||
| ‘Preparing for emergencies: a guide for people on dialysis’ | [ | |||
| ‘Emergency Disconnect Procedure for In-Center Hemodialysis Patients’ | [ | |||
| ‘3-Day Emergency Diet’ | [ | |||
| Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | ‘Emergency kit’ | [ | ||
| Renal Disaster Relief Taskforce of International Society of Nephrology | ‘RDRTF crush patients clinical follow-up chart’ | [ | ||
| National Kidney Foundation | ‘Staying Safe During and After a Flood’ | |||
| Disaster preparedness (Korea) | Ministry of Health and Welfare | Medical institution safety management manual | [ | |
| Outage situation (Korea) | Korea Electric Power Corporation | Provide related information such as general recovery in case of power outage | ||
| Korea Electric Safety Corporation | Emergency backup generator checklist and driving instructions |
HD unit, Hemodialysis unit ; RDRTF, Renal Disaster Relief Task Force; Uniform Resource Locator, URL Adapted from the article of Gray et al (Nephrology [Carlton] 2015;20:873–880) [6] with permission.
Figure 1Proposed logistics for massive disaster and safety management plan in Korean hemodialysis (HD) units
RDRTF, Renal Disaster Relief Task Force.
Power consumption of individual machines from manufacturer manuals
| Status | Machine | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Nipro NCU-18 | Formula Tx | FMC 5008S | Baxter Artis | B-braun Dialog | Asahi MDS101 | |
| Dimension (cm) (height × weight × depth) | 1,470 × 3,00 × 490 | 1,500 × 480 × 380 | 1,680 × 520 × 900 | 1,400 × 600 × 600 | 1,678 × 510 × 637 | 1,636 × 495 × 655 |
| Weight (kg) | 100 | 89 | 100 | 110 | 85 | 68 or 75(option) |
| Voltage | AC 110, 220 | 110/240 AC | 100/240 AC | 230/240 AC | 120/230 | 220 |
| Power consumption | Max 10.8 A | Max 8 A | Max 9 A | Max 10 A | Max 11 A | 1.3 kW + option |
AC, alternating current; Max, maximal.