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APPENDIX F
I N T R O D UCTI O N
The hospitals response to a major incident is dealt with in detail in Major Incident Medical Management and Support: the practical approach in the hospital and readers are referred there for a full account. This appendix provides an introduction for pre-hospital providers.
C O MMA N D A N D CO N TROL
It is important to ensure that the hospital plan species who is in control of the response and how the early (on-site) controllers will hand over control to more senior personnel who arrive later. In most cases control will be via a senior doctor, a senior nurse, and a senior manager working together to coordinate the response.
Local highlights: Command and control of the hospital response
Key point
The Health Service response at the hospital is controlled by the hospital coordination team.
K EY A REA S
A senior nurse should ensure that the clinical areas are prepared to receive casualties and should delegate the running of each area to a senior nurse from that area. The key clinical areas are listed in Box F.1.
Box F.1: Key clinical areas
Triage Priority 1 (immediate) and 2 (urgent) Priority 3 (delayed) Pre-operative and post-operative ward Admissions ward Theatres Intensive care
Major Incident Medical Management and Support: The Practical Approach at the Scene, Third Edition. Edited by Kevin Mackway-Jones. 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Published 2012 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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A senior manager will be responsible for coordinating the non-clinical areas and requirements. The key administrative areas and their uses are listed in Table F.1.
Table F.1: Key administrative areas Key area Staff reporting Volunteer reporting Hospital Information Centre Discharge and reunion area Bereaved relatives area Hospital enquiry point Press area Blood donation Use All staff report here Students and volunteers report here Information on all casualties, admitted or discharged, collated here Relatives/friends of those being discharged to wait here Breaking of bad news and counselling Directed enquiries about patients to be made here Media briefed here If required
STA F F C A LL - I N
Staff will be called in using a cascade system; those key staff called rst will arrange for others from their department to be called. The switchboard will usually have the responsibility to alert the key staff, but this will be done by role rather than name; staff lists held for this reason must be kept up to date. If applicable, direct dial lines or public pay phones in each department should be used for the staff call-in, thus avoiding the busy hospital switchboard. In some departments, the cascade system may be achieved by staff telephoning each other from home.
P R E PA R ATI O N
Areas identied for immediate reception of casualties should be cleared as far as is practicable. Patients waiting for minor treatment in the emergency department should be advised to attend their general practitioner, or to attend a hospital distant from the incident. Wards designated as pre-operative reception and post-operative recovery should be cleared. Inpatients in the designated wards should be discharged where appropriate, or moved to low-dependency areas.
A C T I O N C A RD S
On arriving at the hospital, staff should attend the staff reporting points for task allocation. Those in key positions should be familiar with the hospitals major incident plan and therefore aware of their initial responsibilities. If this is not the case, then the action cards giving a brief description of the duties of the individual will be distributed. An example is given in Box F.2. The action cards for key personnel will be part of the main hospital plan; those for junior members of staff may have to be prepared by individual departments.
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T EA M O RG A N I SATI ON
The effective management of the hospital response is centred on the organisation of personnel into teams with specic tasks. These teams include the following: Casualty treatment teams. Casualty transfer teams. Operating teams.
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The treatment and transfer teams will be based in the initial treatment areas in and around the emergency department. These teams should be controlled by a team coordinator. The team coordinator will be located in the reporting area and will form medical and nursing staff into teams as they become available.
Key point
An effective hospital response is centred around forming personnel into teams with particular tasks.
T R E AT MEN T
In a major incident there will be surgical and medical casualties. The proportions will depend upon the nature of the incident. A bomb will produce multiple surgical patients, whereas a crowd crush will produce multiple patients requiring cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Team composition will have to reect the nature of the demand. Clinical activity in each area will be controlled by senior clinicians. In the priority 1 (immediate) area there will be a senior surgeon (usually the duty consultant surgeon) and a senior physician (either a consultant physician or intensive care specialist), who will direct the treatment and transfer teams. These senior clinicians will also supervise treatment within the priority 2 (urgent) area. Responsibilities in the priority 3 (delayed) area can be separate from this. The senior surgeon should ensure that the highest priority surgical casualties are transferred directly to the operating theatres; once the capacity of the theatres is reached then further casualties should wait for surgery on the pre-operative ward. The senior surgeon should also appoint deputies to oversee activity in the operating theatres and on the pre-operative ward. Specically, the senior surgeon in theatres will coordinate the operating teams, and any specialist surgeons needed for particular procedures; the senior surgeon in pre-op will coordinate the treatment teams on the pre-operative ward. Both will keep the senior surgeon informed of surgical matters in their area. The senior nurse should nominate deputies to ensure that the pre-operative and surgical areas are adequately prepared and staffed to receive casualties. Following surgery, casualties will be transferred back to the pre-operative/post-operative ward, but if this is full then a further ward must be prepared. In hospitals where the emergency department has a short stay or observation ward or when there is a surgical assessment unit, then this ward is ideal for designation as the pre-operative/post-operative ward as it can usually be cleared rapidly in the event of a major incident. Additional wards can then be in the main hospital. The senior physician should direct the transfer of the most seriously ill patients to the intensive care unit. The duty intensive care consultant should assess the bed availability in the
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department and in surrounding hospitals; when the immediate unit is full, he or she should discuss the transfer of patients to intensive care units in other hospitals. Those casualties who do not require immediate surgery or intensive care facilities will be transferred to an admissions ward.
D O C UMEN TATI O N
At the scene the casualty will have a triage label attached to them. If they are evacuated rapidly it is likely that very little, if any, additional information will be recorded. However, those casualties who have been trapped at the scene or received treatment in the Casualty Clearing Station
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may have important clinical details regarding injuries, treatment, and serial observations recorded on this label. It is therefore important that if new documentation is instituted at the hospital, the pre-hospital information is not removed, but is kept with the patient. In the initial reception area, each patient will be issued with major incident documentation and given an identication band with the corresponding number, which must not be removed under any circumstances. The senior nurse in each of the treatment areas is responsible for completing a casualty statement form at regular intervals and returning this to the Hospital Information Centre: the Admissions Ofcer can then maintain an accurate casualty state board.