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Title: Managing Multiple Casualty Incidents The HospitalPrehospital Interface


1
Managing Multiple Casualty Incidents The
Hospital/Pre-hospital Interface
2
Your Instructors
  • Earl Hall
  • Steve Glow

Montana Bioterrorism Training Project
3
  • This project is made available bySt. Vincent
    Healthcare Foundation and the University of
    Montana School of Pharmacy through a grant funded
    by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
    Services (HHS) and the office of the Assistant
    Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR).

4
Definitions
  • MCI Multiple Casualty Incident Any incident
    where the number/severity of patients exceeds the
    capacity of local resources.
  • Local Healthcare System All elements of a
    response Dispatch, Fire/EMS, Law Enforcement,
    Hospitals, Public Health (HSPD-8)

5
Learning Objectives
  • Identify critical pieces of information and
    demonstrate how to communicate them effectively.
  • Describe Incident Command System and how to
    implement it in a MCI
  • Describe a triage system and how to implement it
    during an MCI
  • Integrate Communications, ICS and Triage into an
    effective response system

6
What this course is designed to do
  • Teach local Healthcare system personnel basic
    processes for response, triage, treatment,
    transport and transfer of victims of a multiple
    casualty incident using the START triage system
  • Provide opportunities to practice learned skills
    in a simulated multiple casualty incident
    exercise.
  • Teach skills to organize a response using the
    Natl Incident Management System (NIMS) ICS
  • Provide a NIMS compliant model/standard from
    which current capabilities can be assessed.

7
What this course is not designed to do
  • Write plans and local procedures for you.
  • Provide you with additional resources/equipment
  • Mandate the use of a specific triage system
  • Certify or qualify
  • Teach specific medical interventions other than
    triage.

8
Yes, it can happen here
  • Examples of MCIs in Montana
  • Polson Deck collapse
  • Ennis Shooting
  • Red Lodge CO Poisoning
  • Alberton Chlorine release

9
Types of Multiple Casualty Incidents
  • Trauma
  • Acute Medical
  • Biological

10
Module One Communications
11
Question
What problem is most commonly identified after
exercises or real events in the hotwash or After
Action Report?
12
Implementing the Communications Plan (Group
Discussion)
  • Do you have a communications plan?
  • What are your Dispatch Procedures responder
    notification?
  • How is the Hospital Notified?
  • How does On-Scene Command Communicate with the
    Hospital?
  • How do you Communicate with other hospitals that
    may be impacted by the incident or impact the
    incident?

13
Keys to Clear Communications
  • Key microphone 2 seconds before speaking on a
    repeater based radio system
  • Say who you want to talk to first then say who
    you are.
  • Use clear text (plain language)
  • Speak slowly and clearly (practice this)
  • Repeat back communications to acknowledge receipt
    of message
  • Assume messages not acknowledged were not heard
    and repeat initial message
  • Develop/refine and practice your communications
    plan

14

I am 10-23 at a 10-50. 10-52 times two and a
10-51.
911 HP 1 I am on scene at a car crash with
casualties. I need 2 ambulances and a wrecker.
15

Hospital Medic 1 Enroute to your facility with
a TBI. 2 min LOC and GMS with GCS of 9. ETA 2
min.
Hospital Medic 1 Transporting Pt. 3 triaged
as red/immediate, due to head injury with
respiratory rate of 40, radial pulse present, and
responds to pain only.
16
Establish Command-Overview
  • Initial contact scene/situation size-up
  • Safety
  • Assume/Announce Command
  • Request Resources
  • Identify location, access and positioning
  • Assign/Allocate Resources
  • Plan for Demobilization

17
Scene/situation size-up
  • First responsibility is a walk around
    assessment of the scene or situation
  • Goal is to determine the extent of the problem
  • Initial communications should include the nature
    and scope of the incident and initial tactical
    objectives

18
Assume/Announce Command
  • Responsibility of the first arriving unit is to
    establish command by announcing the name of the
    incident, incident commander and the location of
    the command post
  • Command may be passed to another person once they
    are in a position to assume control

19
Request Resources
  • Resources adequate to resolve the problem should
    be requested and dispatched as they become
    available.
  • They should be told where to report how to
    access the scene
  • If coming in a vehicle, where should it be
    positioned?

20
Assign/Allocate/Reassign Resources
  • Individuals or resources should be assigned
  • Someone to report to (supervisor).
  • A tactical objective to accomplish.
  • A location to work.
  • Once the assignment has been completed, the
    individual or team needs to know where to report
    for another assignment or demobilization.

21
Group Activity
  • Photo/description of MCI Incident
  • Divide into groups (Pre-hospital/Hospital)
  • Play act initial establishment of command for
    each area and communication between groups

22
Module 2 ICS
President
Unified Command
FEMA
Incident Command
23
An Organized Response
  • Requires planning
  • Coordinates resources and personnel

24
Key Principles of NIMS ICS
  • Span of Control
  • Unity of Command
  • Accountability

25
What is Span of Control?
Span-of-Control means that one person can only
supervise 3-7 people and/or be responsible for
3-7 functions effectively.
26
Span-of-Control
  • Refers to number of subordinates that one
    supervisor can manage effectively.
  • Ideal ratio is 5-to-1
  • ICS structure can expand or contract to maintain
    adequate span-of-control by adding/removing
    sections, branches, divisions, groups, teams.

27
What is Unity of Command?
Unity of Command means that you answer to only
one person for tasks and assignments.
28
Unity of Command
  • Each person reports to only one individual
  • ICS organizational chart indicates who that is
  • What would you do if someone other than your
    assigned supervisor asks you to do something
    other than what you were assigned?

29
What does Accountability Mean?
  • There are two types of Accountability
  • You know who is on-scene/site, where they are,
    what they are assigned to do and if they are
    safe.
  • Each person does what they were expected to do.

30
Accountability People
  • It is the responsibility of the incident
    commander to know who is on-scene, to make sure
    they are doing what is needed and No one is left
    behind
  • Check In
  • No freelancing
  • Report to supervisor
  • Check Out/Demobilize

31
Responder Etiquette
Report to a staging area, not the disaster site
32
Accountability Task
  • Give clear assignments
  • Ensure assignment is understood
  • Provide adequate resources
  • Task Completion

33
Report to Staging Area
  • Sign in when you arrive Sign out when you leave
  • Bring ID, credentials
  • Find your designated supervisor
  • Follow directions
  • If asked to leave or provide care else where do
    so

Medical volunteers at staging area
34
Break
35
Incident Command System
  • Used to organize multiple groups/agencies into
    one cohesive team
  • Responses and responders may vary, but the
    organizational principles of ICS remain the same

36
Initiating ICS
  • When an event occurs, initial actions should
    include
  • Scene size up safety
  • Assume/Announce Command (Even if you are the only
    person on scene)
  • Initially organizing the response Assign Tasks
  • Notifying affected agencies (hospitals, LE,
    Fire/EMS)
  • Maintain Command role until Command is transferred

37
ICS Characteristics
  • Critical Characteristics of ICS (7 of 14)
  • Common Terminology
  • Management by Objective
  • Chain of Command/Unity of Command
  • Resource Management
  • Integrated Communications
  • Manageable Span of Control
  • Accountability of personnel and resources

38
Basic ICS Organizational Structure
39
Small Scale On-Scene ICS
40
Emergency Dept ICS
41
Larger Scale Hospital ICS
42
Mobilization of Resources
What resources are available to my community
during an MCI?
43
Predicting Casualty Flow
44
Local Resources
  • Ground Ambulances
  • Air Ambulances
  • Fire/Rescue Vehicles
  • ED beds
  • Hospital beds
  • Operating Rooms
  • Blood Supply
  • Imaging/Lab Capacity
  • Ventilators
  • EMTs
  • Flight Crews
  • Firefighters
  • MDs, RNs
  • RNs, CNAs
  • Surgeons, OR Crews
  • Blood Bank Staff
  • Imaging/Lab Staff
  • Resp Therapists

45
External Resources
  • Refer to the External Resources handout in your
    packet
  • Regional (ChemPaks, Antibiotics, Antivirals)
  • State (MCI trailers in Helena, MHMAS )
  • Federal (DMAT, SNS, FEMA)

46
ICS/MCI Roles Responsibilities
  • Every incident must have an Incident Commander.
  • In the next few slides we will describe the
    positions/functions within the Incident Command
    System critical to managing multiple casualty
    incidents.

47
Key ICS Roles in a MCI
  • IC Every incident must have an IC
  • Medical Branch Director Only if the incident is
    big enough and you have the resources to fill the
    position.
  • Triage Group Supervisor
  • Treatment Group Supervisor
  • Transport/Transfer Group Supervisor
  • Rescue or Decon Group Supervisor

48
The Incident Commander
  • Role
  • Assumes and announces command
  • Leads response effort

49
IC Responsibilities
  • Assess incident and communicate an Incident
    Action Plan (IAP)
  • Ensure the safety of responders
  • Request additional resources
  • Develop organizational structure that effectively
    manages incident (Assign, Delegate)
  • Develop plans that stay ahead of the need for
    resources
  • Maintain Command until Command is transferred.

50
Assessment and Care of Multiple Patients
  • On-Scene
  • Rescue/Extrication
  • Triage
  • Treatment
  • Transport
  • see slide 40
  • Hospital
  • Decon
  • Triage/Re-Triage
  • Treatment
  • Admission/Discharge/Transfer
  • see slide 41

51
Medical Branch Director Responsibilities
  • Takes the medical burden off the IC or Operations
    Section Chief
  • The Medical Branch Director assigns and
    supervises the triage, treatment and transfer
    group supervisors
  • The Medical Branch Director reports to the
    Operations Section Chief or the IC

52
Rescue Group(s)
  • This and triage are happening simultaneously in
    concert with each other.
  • Extrication
  • Technical Rescue
  • Dive Teams
  • HazMat Decon
  • Patient Movement (out of hazard zone to patient
    collection area/treatment tarps)

53
On-Scene Triage Responsibilities
  • Size up number and acuity of patients
  • See each patient rapidly and categorize using a
    standard triage system
  • Document the triage category assigned
  • Communicate (with who) the order of treatment
    (who needs help first?)

54
Hospital Triage Responsibilities
  • Identify the location(s) where triage will occur
  • Ensure safe access and egress
  • Anticipate self transporting patients
  • Implement hospital MCI triage protocol
  • Communicate / document triage decisions to
    Treatment Group

55
Scene Treatment Responsibilities
  • Locate a suitable treatment area and report that
    location to Triage Group Supervisor and Command.
  • Evaluate resources required for patient
    treatment, and report those needs to Command
  • Provide suitable immediate and delayed
    treatment areas.
  • Assign, direct, supervise, and coordinate
    personnel within your group.
  • Allocate resources.
  • Provide lifesaving basic life support before
    advanced life support.
  • Match patient needs with provider skills
  • Report progress to Command

56
Hospital Treatment Responsibilities
  • Provide definitive care identify and fix the
    problem
  • Provide lifesaving basic life support before
    advanced life support.
  • Organize care providers into efficient teams
  • use ICS principles to maintain control.
  • Match patient needs with provider skills.
  • Use available resources, making decisions about
    resource allocation at each step.
  • Use tools to document and aid organization
  • Transport/Transfer/Admit them to the place where
    these needs can be met.

57
Scene Transport Responsibilities
  • Establish/communicate location of ambulance
    staging (if Command has not already done so) and
    patient loading areas.
  • Report resource requirements to Command
  • Establish/manage a helicopter landing site if
    warranted
  • Communicate with Command and Hospitals to obtain
    medical facility status and treatment
    capabilities.
  • Supervise assigned personnel
  • Coordinate with other divisions/groups
  • Efficiently and safely move patients to the next
    location in the continuum of care while providing
    for their medical needs enroute.
  • Report progress to Command

58
Hospital Transfer Responsibilities
  • Communicate with treatment group supervisor for
    information about patients who need transfer to
    other facilities
  • Determine the number and type of transportation
    resources needed and available.
  • Arrange transport to referral centers (stage
    resources early?)
  • Stage resources until needed
  • Efficiently and safely move patients to the next
    location in the continuum of care while providing
    for their medical needs enroute.
  • Communicate with receiving facilities to
    determine capacity and provide advance information

59
Staying Organized
  • Organizational Tools
  • Plans
  • Protocols
  • Forms
  • Job Action Sheets

60
Group Activity
  • Working with your group take ten minutes to
    prepare a VERBAL Incident Action Plan (IAP) for
    the first 15 minutes of the incident.
  • Describe the situation, what you are going to do
    about it, and who is going to help you do it.
  • Select a spokesperson and be prepared to
    verbalize the IAP

61
Break
62
  • This page is intentionally left blank

63
Module 3 Triage System
64
Triage French to sort
  • A process in which victims are sorted into
    groups priorities of care are established and
    resources are allocated.

65
Triage Organizes Priorities
  • Normal Circumstances
  • Use all available manpower and supplies
  • Resource use focuses on saving one life
  • Mass Casualty Situation
  • Number of injured exceeds ability to treat in
    normal manner
  • Resource use focuses on saving as many lives as
    possible
  • Minor injuries wait for care
  • Severe injuries receive immediate care
  • Mortal injuries do not receive care

66
How Responses are Organized
  • Disaster plans are prepared
  • Responders become familiar with the plan
  • Plans include the use of
  • Communication Plan
  • Incident Command System (ICS)
  • Provides leadership and structure
  • Triage
  • Used to manage limited resources
  • Prioritize patient care based on survivability

67
What Makes Triage Difficult
  • More patients than resources
  • Victims who are Beyond Rescue
  • Black tag (morgue) category
  • To NOT treat such patients will oppose all your
    training and instincts
  • Example
  • Patient has no pulse and is not breathing
  • Routine situation compared to a mass casualty
    situation

68
Protocols for Triage and Treatment
  • Must develop protocols BEFORE they are needed
  • Keep protocols and treatment plans up-to-date
  • Practice triage method
  • Practice getting organized to do triage
  • Remember Triage is a continuous process

69
If you get a report that the scene has 5 yellow
patients and 3 red patients, do you know what
that means?
70
What are the problems with START? (Group
Discussion)
  • Does not take resources into account
  • Some are more Red than others
  • Uses a limited number of physical parameters
    (RPM)
  • Not commonly used during daily operations

71
S.T.A.R.T. Triage System
  • S.T.A.R.T. (Simple Triage Rapid Transport)
  • Example of a triage method that quickly
    classifies victims and prioritizes treatment
  • Little or no care needed,
  • Delay care, injuries not life-threatening
  • Immediate care for life-threatening situation
  • No care, mortal injuries, cannot be saved

MINOR
DELAYED
IMMEDIATE
MORGUE
72
S.T.A.R.T. Patient Tag
  • Left side used for notes on injuries and vital
    signs
  • Right side contains decision flow chart
    (algorithm)
  • Note the four color-coded categories at the
    bottom

73
S.T.A.R.T. Triage Kit
  • Triage kit includes
  • Tape to create triage areas
  • Patient triage tags
  • Clipboards
  • ID Vests

74
Tools Triage Flow Chart
  • Flow Chart Decisions
  • 1. Separate walking wounded from others
  • 2. Use life functions to tag remaining patients
  • a. Respirations
  • b. Perfusion
  • c. Mental Status

75
First Step Breathing
  • Cannot breathe on own after airway opened
    BLACK tag
  • Breathing rapidly RED tag
  • Breathing regularly (go to next step in flow
    chart - PERFUSION)

76
Second Step Blood Flow
  • If detectable pulse, go to step 3 Mental Status
  • If no detectable radial pulse - check capillary
    refill
  • Refill more than 2 seconds needs to control
    bleeding - RED tag
  • Capillary refill less than 2 seconds - go to step
    4 Mental Status

77
Third Step Mental Status
  • Cannot follow simple command - RED tag
  • Can follow simple command - YELLOW tag
  • End of algorithm all victims should be tagged
    now.

78
  • RED
  • RR gt 30
  • No Radial Pulse or cap refill gt 2 sec
  • Cannot follow simple commands

79
ActivityTriage Practice Case 1
  • A woman runs up to you, supporting her left arm,
    and says, I think its broken.
  • Respiratory rate is 24/minute
  • Radial pulse rate is 120/minute
  • How would you label her?


80
ActivityTriage Practice Case 2
  • You approach a man who is lying on the ground
  • He is taking 36 breaths per minute
  • You cannot find a radial pulse
  • Capillary refill takes almost 5 seconds
  • He moans when you use a painful pinch
  • How would you label him?


81
ActivityTriage Practice Case 3
  • A woman is sitting slumped over, not breathing
  • You open her airway still not breathing
  • There is no radial pulse
  • Her carotid pulse is 30 beats/minute
  • She does not respond to noise, touch, or painful
    stimuli
  • How would you label her?


82
Now that you understand START
  • Does the triage system you use daily in the ED
    work for MCIs?
  • If not, you need to decide whether during an MCI
    you will
  • Stay with START system initiated pre-hospital or-
  • Adapt your current system to include a category
    for the patients who are expected to die given
    maximum treatment with the available resources

83
  • What Triage system does your ED use everyday?
  • MCI Triage Options
  • Stay with the START system initiated pre-hospital
    or-
  • Adapt your current system to include a category
    for the patients who are expected to die even if
    they are given maximum treatment with the
    available resources

84
Summary
  • Communication
  • Organization
  • Prioritization (triage)
  • Resource Management
  • Accountability (Personnel, Patients)

85
Applied Exercise
  • After lunch, something bad is going to happen
  • During Lunch (provided) spend some time talking
    with your group about how you would manage an MCI
  • Of the people in your group who would assume
    what role(s)?
  • No performance anxiety.

86
For More Information
  • HICS
  • http//www.emsa.ca.gov/hics/hics.asp
  • NIMS
  • http//www.dhs.gov/interweb/assetlibrary/NIMS-90-w
    eb.pdf
  • FEMA (Certificate in basicICS)
  • http//training.fema.gov/EMIWeb/IS/is195.asp
  • OSHA
  • http//www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/ics/org.html

87
Acknowledgements
88
More Information on Triage
MINOR
  • For additional practice
  • http//www.citmt.org/start/exercise.htm
  • For more information on tags
  • http//www.mettag.com
  • To find out to fill out a tag
  • http//www.digisys.net/oes/triagetag.htm

DELAYED
IMMEDIATE
MORGUE
89
References
  • Brady, Paramedic Emergency Care, Bledsoe, Porter,
    Shade
  • NIMS ICS Field Guide, 1st Edition Infomed
  • Disaster Medicine, 2002 Lippincott Williams
    Wilkins, Hogan and Burnstein
  • Emergency Medical Services at a Mass Casualty
    Incident, Joseph Cahill, Domestic Preparedness
    Journal V. III, Issue 7, July 2007
  • Creating Order from Chaos Part II Tactical
    Planning for Mass Casualty and Disaster Response
    a Definitive Care Facilities, Baker, Michael S.,
    Article Military Medicine, Mar 2007
  • In a Moments Notice Surge Capacity for
    Terrorist Bombings, Challenges and Proposed
    Solutions, CDC, April 2007
  • International Nursing Coalition for Mass Casualty
    Education, Educational Competencies for
    Registered Nurses Responding to Mass Casualty
    Incidents, August 2003
  • Mass Casualty Incident Program, Initial Triage
    Training, AEMS, courtesy of Pheonix FD.
  • Virginia Mass Casualty Incident Management,
    Secondary Triage
  • Improving health system preparedness for
    terrorism and mass casualty events,
    Recommendations for action, July 2007, AMA/APHA
    Consensus report
  • Mass Medical Care with Scarce Resources, A
    Community Planning Guide, Health Systems Research
    Inc., Feb. 2007
  • Nancy Carolines, Emergency Care in the Streets,
    Sixth Edition
  • National Incident Management System, Principles
    and Practice, Walsh, Christen, Miller, Callsen
    and Maniscalco

90
NIMS ICS Titles(not negotiable)
Title
Organizational Level
Incident Commander
Incident Command
Officer
Command Staff
Chief
General Staff (Section)
Director
Branch
Supervisor
Division/Group
Leader
Unit
Leader
Strike Team/Task Force
91
Discussion/Group Activity List
  • Group Activities
  • Module 1, Slide 20, Communications Practice
  • Module 2 Slide 61, Verbal IAP
  • Module 3 Slide 78-80 Triage Practice
  • Discussions
  • Slide 15 Communications Plan
  • Slide 40-41 ICS Roles
  • Slide 45 Local Resources
  • Slide 55 of Providers/colored patient
  • Slide 69 Problems with START
  • Slide 82 START vs. ESI
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