Initial Management of Hospital Evacuations Caused by Hurricane Rita: A Systematic Investigation

Author:

Downey Erin L.,Andress Knox,Schultz Carl H.

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionHurricanes remain a major threat to hospitals throughout the world. The authors attempted to identify the planning areas that impact hospital management of evacuations and the challenges faced when sheltering-in-place.MethodsThis observational, retrospective cohort study examined acute care institutions from one hospital system impacted by Hurricane Rita in 2005. Investigators used a standardized survey instrument and interview process, previously used in the hospital evacuation context, to examine hospitals’ initial internal situational awareness and subsequent decision making that resulted in evacuation due to Hurricane Rita. Participants from each hospital included representatives from senior leadership and clinical and nonclinical staff that comprised the Incident Management Team (IMT). The main measured outcomes were responses to 95 questions contained in the survey.ResultsSeven of ten eligible hospitals participated in the study. All facilities evacuated the sickest patients first. The most significant factors prompting evacuation were the issuing of mandatory evacuation orders, storm dynamics (category, projected path, storm surge), and loss of regional communications. Hospitals that sheltered-in-place experienced staff shortages, interruptions to electrical power, and loss of water supplies. Three fully-evacuated institutions experienced understaffing of 40%-60%, and four hospitals sustained depressed staffing levels for over four weeks. Five hospitals lost electricity for a mean of 4.8 days (range .5-11 days). All facilities continued to receive patients to their Emergency Departments (EDs) while conducting their own evacuation.ConclusionHospital EDs should plan for continuous patient arrival during evacuation. Emergency Operation Plans (EOPs) that anticipate challenges associated with evacuation will help to maximize initial decision making and management during a crisis situation. Hospitals that shelter-in-place face critical shortages and must provide independent patient care for prolonged periods.DowneyEL, AndressK, SchultzCH. Initial management of hospital evacuations caused by Hurricane Rita: a systematic investigation. Prehosp Disaster Med. 2013;28(3):1-7.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Emergency,Emergency Medicine

Reference26 articles.

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4. National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration. Tropical Cyclone Report: Hurricane Rita. http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/pdf/TCR-AL182005_Rita.pdf. Published 2006. Accessed July 20, 2011.

5. Government Accountability Office. Disaster Preparedness: Limitations in Federal Evacuation Assistance for Health Facilities Should be Addressed. http://www.gao.gov/htext/d06826.html. Published 2006. Accessed November 15, 2012.

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