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Disaster Pharmacy: Hospital and Field Operations

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Sodium thiosulfate two 50ml vials. 12.5 grams in 50ml $8.10 each. Amyl nitrate inhalant, USP ... Cost: $503.81 for 6 vials ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Disaster Pharmacy: Hospital and Field Operations


1
Disaster Pharmacy Hospital and Field Operations
  • Laura C. Block, PharmD and Amanda Miller, RPh
  • GA-3 DMAT

2
Disaster Pharmacy Hospital Operations
  • Laura Block, PharmD
  • GA-3 DMAT

3
DeKalb Medical Center
  • 525 acute care bed hospital
  • Level III trauma center
  • 74,818 ED visits in 2003
  • DeKalb County population in 2000 676,976

4
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience Why is
disaster pharmacy an issue in the hospital?
  • Lack of financial resources
  • Hospital staff pushed to their limits day-to-day
    without the extra burden of a disaster
  • Many people in average hospital pharmacy are not
    disaster-savvy
  • Cost of ONE cyanide antidote kit to treat ONE
    patient - 188.86
  • Who can afford to be prepared for what might or
    might not happen?

5
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience Disaster
Preparedness on a Shoestring Budget
  • Emergency committee had no budget
  • Some believe that the only purpose of
    preparedness plan is for Joint Commission
    approval
  • Itll never happen here...
  • Pharmacy had limited money to play with
  • One brave pharmacy director gave the go-ahead

6
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience Cyanide
Antidote Kits
  • Why do these things cost so much? Is it the
    tubing? Hospitals have tubing
  • Its the sodium nitrate!
  • Unobtainable at any price from 3 months prior to
    Iraq War until December 2003
  • Hope Pharmaceuticals sodium nitrate, USP
    300mg/10ml vial, 84.95 for 2 vials, enough to
    treat 1 patient

7
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience
  • Theres got to be another way
  • Sodium nitrate granules, non-pharmaceutical grade
  • 500 grams is 34.62
  • More than enough to treat 30 patients, but its
    extremely caustic
  • How to reconstitute? No published guidance
  • See www.ohanet.com for unpublished guidance

8
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience
  • Unproven ideas for reconstitution of sodium
    nitrate
  • Treat as chemotherapy (compound in chemo hood
    wearing chemo gloves and gown and mat)
  • Reconstitute in glass conical
  • Minimize contact between gloves and solution (to
    preserve integrity of barrier)
  • Can we use 0.22 micron filter after adding to IV
    bags?

9
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience Cyanide
Antidote Kits
  • The rest was easy
  • Sodium thiosulfate two 50ml vials
  • 12.5 grams in 50ml
  • 8.10 each
  • Amyl nitrate inhalant, USP
  • 0.3 ml, box of 12
  • 5.65/box

10
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience Cost of our
Cyanide Kits
  • Known costs
  • Drugs23.01 per kit
  • Unknown costs
  • Equipment for reconstitution
  • Pharmacist time for reconstitution
  • Hazmat response charge?
  • New hospital building? (due to explosion? due to
    contamination?) shoot it was already a disaster
    before we started this part

11
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience
Organophosphate Antidote
  • Bulk Atropine Powder
  • Reconstitution per published paper
  • Ann Emerg Med. 200341453-456.
  • Treat as chemo for reconstitution
  • Cost 9.44 for 5 gram bottle
  • 2-PAM
  • Cost 503.81 for 6 vials

12
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience Potassium
Iodide for Radiological Events
  • Iosat Tablets
  • Can you even get it if youre not a Fed?
  • Yes, its an OTC product
  • Is this wise?
  • But itll cost you retail 9.95 for 9 tablets,
    wholesale 4.23/9 tablets

13
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience Potassium
Iodide for Radiological Events
  • SSKI
  • Cheap and Easy!
  • Cost per bottle 20.44 for 8 ounces
  • 0.13ml/130mg dosemore than 1600 doses
  • Cost of amber PO 0.5ml syringes 0.39 per
    syringe from HCL
  • Total cost per dose 0.40

14
The DeKalb Medical Center Experience
  • Total cost for supplies to treat 30 patients for
  • Cyanide 23.01
  • Organophosphates 2,558.44
  • Radiation 168.00
  • Orange boxes 17.50
  • Cart 171
  • Entire package 2,937.95

15
Useful References
  • Biological and Chemical Terrorism (from ASHP)
  • Ed. by Krenzelok
  • Disaster Medicine
  • Eds. Hogan and Burstein
  • Management of Persons Accidentally Contaminated
    with Radionuclides
  • (AKA NCRP Report 65)
  • www.ohanet.org, search for antidote

16
Thank You
  • Lee Underwood, RPh, Director of Pharmacy, DeKalb
    Medical Center
  • Mark Embry, Purchasing Technician, DeKalb Medical
    Center
  • All of our staff pharmacists

17
Disaster Pharmacy Field Operations
Amanda Miller, RPh GA-3 DMAT
18
Field Pharmacy
  • In the field, pharmaceuticals can be divided into
    three categories
  • What you need
  • Where is it coming from?
  • What you have
  • What condition is it in?
  • How do you maintain it?
  • Do you actually need it?
  • What you have WAY too much of
  • Useable or not useable?
  • How do I get it outta here? (legally)

19
What You Need
  • Current pathway is dictated pharmaceuticals come
    from Rockville-LC
  • Not everybody agrees with the formulary
  • Not every disaster complies with the formulary
  • But some situations call for special packaging
    which the LC can handle in advance

20
What You Need
  • Some teams also have MOUs
  • With wholesalers
  • With Hospitals
  • With other government agencies
  • Currently considered redundant capacity
  • Some MOUs are more successful than others (e.g.
    cache from VA rarely includes pediatric meds even
    if they are part of the MOU)

21
What You Need
  • Field Acquisition
  • Directed by OER/MST
  • May come through wholesalers
  • May come from other Federal agencies
  • Delivery may consume considerable team-member
    work hours
  • a You still may not get what you need

22
What You Have
  • If you brought it with you (lucky you!)
  • ASAP Sort into AHFS therapeutic categories
  • ASAP Inventory ensure you actually have what
    the invoice says you have
  • an opportunity to visually inspect the load for
    damage
  • an opportunity to begin to note what you may need
    more of based on the type of disaster

23
What You Have
  • If you brought it with you (lucky you!)
  • Particularly need to inventory controlled
    substances (not just C-II, but C-III, C-IV and
    C-V, as well)
  • MST may request a daily inventory
  • best if 2 people sign this
  • In 24 hour operations will need to count
    controlled substances at shift change
  • Use of numbered locking tabs may reduce the time
    burden

24
What You Have
  • If you brought it with you (lucky you!)
  • ASAP Ensure that all temperature and other
    storage recommendations are being met
  • keep records of temperature, etc if you dont
    have these records things become more difficult
    later

25
What You Have
  • If you brought it with you (lucky you!)
  • Begin immediately making note of needs and
    requesting shortfall items and replacement of
    items used
  • generally, the MST wants an order first thing
    every morning
  • anticipate needs it may take several days for an
    item to arrive

26
What You Have
  • If it was acquired in the field
  • Source known (OER)
  • Apply same standards as items you brought with
    you
  • Source known (other)
  • Many people and organizations donate drugs to
    disaster relief as a tax write-off without regard
    for the usefulness or appropriateness of the
    donated items
  • Donated items may initially need to be sorted for
    appropriateness BEFORE sorting into AHFS
    therapeutic categories

27
What You Have
  • If acquired in the field
  • Source uncertain
  • If youre not 100 sure of who gave them to you
    and why, dont use them
  • Risk of forgeries, adulterated meds, meds may
    have been kept in substandard conditions, and
    worst of all,
  • a may be a vector of secondary attack
  • Make arrangements with MST for removal of suspect
    items from theater of operations

28
What You Have Way Too Much Of But Could
Potentially Use
  • Be in contact with MST
  • Let them know what you have too much of
  • Let them know what the storage requirements for
    it are
  • Request that it be removed, transferred to other
    teams, offered to other agencies in order to
    reduce maintenance burden in the field

29
What You Have Way Too Much Of And Do Not Need
  • Be in contact with MST
  • Let them know what you have too much of
  • Let them know what the storage requirements for
    it are
  • Let them know why it is inappropriate or might be
    dangerous
  • Make arrangements with MST for removal of
    inappropriate items from theater of operations

30
When it is all over
  • In most cases, the MST will reclaim the cache,
    even if it came with your team via your team MOU
  • To help then out, package things reasonably for
    shipment
  • This includes packaging items that are damaged or
    short-dated or out-dated separately
  • Include notes or packaging lists to communicate
    your methodology to the recipients of these
    itemsif you dont the work will all have to be
    done again

31
When it is all over
  • An attempt is made to repackage the items for use
    at the next event
  • Example.. Many leftovers from WTC were repackaged
    for the 2002 Olympics
  • Really, only the items in the Pharmacy Basic Load
    will be turned around
  • All of the rest will likely go to waste the best
    case scenario is that the items are returned for
    credit

32
What is left over
  • Destruction
  • Credit from guaranteed returns
  • Controlled substances? (no DEA )

33
The Afghanistan Hospital Project
  • There were literally TONS of pharmaceuticals left
    over when the medical mission at the WTC ended.
  • Much of that was
  • Given to the Mayors OEM in NYC (a back-handed
    gift)
  • trashed without being destroyed

34
Looming Questions
35
Thank You
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