Author:
Martchenke Julie,Pointer James E.
Abstract
AbstractObjective:To study hospital disaster operations following a major United States disaster.Design:Researchers interviewed all 51 hospital administrators and 49 of 51 emergency department (ED) charge nurses and emergency physicians who were on duty at the study hospitals during the 13-hour period immediately following the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.Setting:The 51 acute-care hospitals in the six northern California counties most affected by the Loma Prieta earthquake.Measurements:Questionnaires and inperson interviews.Results:The most frequently noted problem was lack of communications within and among organizations. Hospitals received inadequate information about the disaster from local governmental agencies. Forty-three percent of hospitals had inadequate back-up power configurations, and five hospitals sustained total back-up generator failures. Twenty hospitals performed partial evacuations.Conclusions:The Loma Prieta earthquake did not cause total disruption of hospital services. Hospitals need to work with local governmental agencies and internal hospital departments to improve disaster communications.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Emergency,Emergency Medicine
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