ASSESSMENT OF VULNERABILITY OF REGIONAL HEALTHCARE CAPABILITY

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ASSESSMENT OF VULNERABILITY OF REGIONAL HEALTHCARE CAPABILITY Spring 2016 www.metrolinapreparedness.org

Metrolina Healthcare Preparedness Coalition Assessment of Vulnerability of the Regional Healthcare Capability Project Overview The Metrolina Healthcare Preparedness Coalition (MHPC) initiated this project in order to better understand the relationship between the hazard and vulnerability assessments (HVAs) conducted by the MHPC partners and the risks that threaten the region s ability to continue the provision of healthcare. Each healthcare partner and county emergency management agency regularly conducts an HVA or Risk Assessment focused on the potential impacts to that local facility or community and the operations therein. This project is a foundational step for understanding the events and circumstances that may reduce the capability and capacity of healthcare provision throughout the MHPC region. All Clear Emergency Management Group, LLC (All Clear) was retained to support the MHPC in the facilitation of this project. Conditions Creating the Highest Risk to Regional Healthcare Capability A list of top hazards served as a starting point for participants to conduct a root cause analysis and understand the elements that were consistent among hazards or that contributed to the hazard being a part of the top hazards list. This examination of the top hazards led the group to identify five areas that significantly contributed to the vulnerability that the hazards present to the region s healthcare capability. These conditions were not prioritized during the workshop but a root-cause analysis was performed and mitigation strategies discussed. Further explanation of how these hazards were derived can be found below. Condition Communications Human Capital Evacuation Loss of Regional Infrastructure Inclement Weather Issue Issues with current communications technology and plans are present. Operating with limited staffing and elevated census. Will impact the ability to manage a patient surge. Evacuation plans are inadequate and do not integrate regional partners. Current regional capabilities are unclear and facilities are not completely aware of the impact one facility issue can have on the entire region. Creates widespread challenges with all partners that include staffing, transportation, and resource issues. 2

Methodology The assessment of the vulnerability of regional healthcare capability was developed in a multifaceted approach. The initial step was for the MHPC to gather data about facility vulnerabilities. To accomplish this the MHPC collected facility HVAs and Risk Assessments from regional partners. Prior to the collection of HVAs, the MHPC participated in the HVA development process for the previous two years with the majority of the regional hospitals. This participation allowed for greater insight into the internal processes of development. As facility data was collected, MHPC staff met with 15 facilities during meetings when the facilities were conducting annual HVA review. The MHPC staff asked standardized questions to ascertain a facility s perception of local and regional gaps in healthcare capability. This information was provided to All Clear prior to the workshops and was summarized in preparation for the workshop. The vulnerabilities impacting facilities and the region were compiled so that each could be analyzed during the workshop. The workshop was structured so that the facility and regional healthcare vulnerabilities could be reviewed and validated. Participants at the workshop included emergency management representatives from numerous hospitals, EMS agencies, Continuing Care facilities, and local Public Health jurisdictions. Participants examined the relationship between facility and regional vulnerabilities. Through workshop discussion a list of the highest risk regional hazards was compiled. This list of hazards contained those that were most probable, were perceived to have the highest impact on the regional healthcare capability, or demonstrated the lowest level of mitigation and preparedness. The workshop process was developed to progressively analyze vulnerability. First, participants began by reviewing and validating the most common facility vulnerabilities. Second, regional healthcare vulnerabilities were discussed. Third, an analysis of facility and regional vulnerabilities provided a foundation for discussion about the issues, events, conditions and situations that comprise to the regional healthcare vulnerability. As the lists of facility and regional vulnerabilities were analyzed several events and conditions were identified as those that are most likely to impact the regional healthcare capability. A list of 12 issues was identified and further analyzed to determine common themes or connections among the 12. From the list of 12 the participants selected five events and conditions for which to conduct a root cause analysis and create mitigation strategies. The list of five can be found in the second section of this document. The analysis of these can be found below in the chart titled Analysis of Conditions. 3

Events and conditions identified as likely to impact regional healthcare capability Significant weather (+4 or ¼ inch of flooding, dam failure) Bed capacity Drought Highly Infectious disease Supply resources, management and distribution Communications and interoperability (risk communications and operational communication) Regional mass notification Staffing and the resource of personnel Ability to provide for staff and visitors Power grid Extraordinary event Regional evacuation coordination and agreements Regional coordination, agreements, understanding one another s roles and expectations in an emergency The following sections provide detail about the root-cause analysis and mitigation strategies of the identified top five events and conditions likely to impact regional healthcare capability. 4

Analysis of Conditions Condition Current Status Issues Mitigation Communications Operational Coordination MHPC has multiple communication systems (SMARTT, WebEOC, VIPER 800, NCMCN, Email, Telephone, Internal systems of Coalition partners). Communication difficult within some facilities Communication amongst partners is insufficient None of the systems meet all of the MHPC needs and interoperability can be difficult. Not all partners understand the current systems available. Radios may not work in all areas of the hospital is one example. Silo Effect : Typically planning has occurred internally and is not shared externally. Plans do not exist to demonstrate how and what to communicate to partners either regionally or within the MHPC. Work with State and partners to develop more effective communication systems. Identify a better resource for regional mass communication that includes a plan, process, and technology. Provide training to appropriate personnel. Work with partners to develop and test plans for internal communication. Ensure that plans are written and that each agenc has a basic understanding of one another s plans. Develop and distribute contact information for regional partners to include the roles and responsibilities of each. Develop a process to utilize the MHPC to disseminate information regionally (serve as a liaison). - Consider developing a brief hospital/healthcare Liaison Officer course Create a situational awareness tool or process for the region that will allow healthcare partners to more quickly develop an understanding of issues 5

There is no written agreement or process developed for the protection of proprietary information from regional partners. Information released must have senior leader approval. This delays and often prevents notification. and impacts concerning the regional healthcare capability. - Include method to share current status an availability - Include method to request needed resources Create a regional template of question/trigger, answer, authority for sharing information about facility impact events. Include the Telehealth/ Physician Connection Line from the regional hospitals in the development o plans and processes. Develop an agreement for sharing information an list of information that can be shared during an emergency. The agreement should detail necessary agreements, plans, pre-scripted messages, or go-kits. Garner senior leadership buy-in/support for communication and coordination of certain information. Condition Current Status Issues Mitigation All partners are operating with minimal Limited staff results in limited Explore the use of regional hospitals and EMS Human Capital staffing required to conduct business. ability to receive patient surge. agencies, ServNC and SMAT and NDMS for certain The healthcare worker resource is potentially widely impacted by a variety of events. The availability of healthcare workers can be impacted by physical Plans to support volunteers within healthcare facilities are lacking or untested. events. Create triggers for activation of each. Explore the development of an MOU amongst regional hospitals to share staff. Ensure that evacuation plans include sending the staff current caring for the patient to the receiving facility. 6

fatigue, psychological fatigue, a shortage of licensed or skilled workers, the need for healthcare workers to care for their families, a shortage of food or supplies needed to sustain workers, or a shortage of physical space to house or support the workers. Encourage internal planning for utilization of volunteers and visiting staff. Consider developing a workgroup among systems and facilities for establishing primary source verification testing, determining the mutual expectation, and establishing a mechanism to enhance regional collaboration. Explore laws and regulations for relaxing licensure and applying those exceptions. Event Current Status Issues Mitigation There is a lack of regional healthcare evacuation coordination process that Create an evacuation workgroup to address the need for a regional evacuation plan or process. Th Evacuation includes authority and addresses legal process should address the issues listed as well as concerns. how to send staff or resources (medical equipmen and medications) with a patient and manage financial implications. Share event reviews and best practices to educate senior leadership. Key points to share include: - How quickly the event unfolded - Details about what happened 7

Family reunification plans are inadequate. Family reunification will be labor intensive and will require cooperation across the region. Evacuation of a facility creates numerous issues that include transport of staff, specialty patients, determining routes for transport, and the physical ability of staff to move patients. When an evacuation occurs there is a strong likelihood that all other facilities and resources are also busy. Coordination is necessary to determine the destination or available locations as well as vehicle access in and out of the evacuating and receiving facility. Alternative care facilities may need to be activated as stopover points. Currently, plans are developed without coordination among facilities. Plans that involve hospital, EMS, healthcare coalition, fire, and emergency management have not been developed. Most plans that are in existence involve only hospitals. Most healthcare facilities are occupied to capacity. Often it is a regional event that would cause an evacuation. This would mean that the receiving facility may have fewer beds available. Regional Alternate Care Facility (ACF) plans have not been developed. Internal ACF plans are not complete or haven t been tested. - The downstream impact on other facilities and agencies - Succession planning and lines of authority Family reunification plans should be reviewed and integrated across the MHPC. 8

Loss of Regional Infrastructure Plans for record sharing and maintaining patient privacy have not been developed or exercised Regional process for patient tracking does not exist NC OEMS has a new patient tracking tool. A plan o the process of tracking must be developed. Training should be conducted with appropriate personnel regarding when and how to use the patient tracking tool. Event Current Status Issues Mitigation Lack of awareness regarding the impact of a change in capability or capacity would have on regional partners. No clear process for communicating loss of regional infrastructure. Current regional capabilities are unclear. Plans not developed. Provide education to improve the mutual understanding of the reliance and interaction of facilities. Develop regional communication plans. Conduct an assessment of essential healthcare services and the overall capacity and capability of those services. Utilize the assessment to prioritize what needs to be addressed. Event Current Status Issues Mitigation Weather events create infrastructure damage, patient surge, consume resources, and tax systems. Inclement Weather Staff are widely impacted by weather. Weather events present problems for getting staff into the facility or supporting the staff, and their Ensure that healthcare partners have functional continuity of operations plans (COOP). Enhance preparedness for housing plans for staff, visitors and discharged patients. 9

families, while staff work during a weather event. Transportation for patients, staff, & public is impacted by weather. Resources are difficult to get into and out of a facility. Services, such as waste disposal, are impacted. Communications, utilities and services can be damaged or interrupted due to a weather event. Create a proactive approach to communication & coordination during weather events. Ensure that trigger points are clearly defined and widely understood. This should include a communication plan and utilization of available technology like WebEOC and SMARTT. Regional partners are often overwhelmed during a weather event. Financial loses are experienced by partners during inclement weather due to inability to open and treat patients. 10

Appendix A: Participants Hospitals Caromont Health CHS Blue Ridge CHS Cleveland CHS Kings Mountain CHS Lincoln CHS Pineville CHS Union CHS Anson CHS Northeast CHS University CHS Mercy CHS Rehabilitation Novant Health Charlotte Novant Health Matthews Novant Health Huntersville John Watts Thomas Logan Noreen Minogue Robbie Ossman Heather Harper Derrell Clark Kip Clark Ted Aston Jeremiah Fennessy Ben Homan Emergency Management Mecklenburg County Elaney Katsafanas EMS Cabarrus County EMS Jimmy Lentz Cleveland County EMS Joe Lord Gaston County EMS Clyde Cantrell Lincoln County EMS Kim Green Mecklenburg County EMS Michael Stanford Public Health Cabarrus Health Alliance Darnell Boyd Iredell Public Health Sam Migit Lincoln County Public Health Lera Allen Kellie Harkin Mecklenburg County Public Health Bobby Kennedy Union County Public Health Emily Walmsley Continuing Care CHS Continuing Care Jill DeMuth 11