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Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust. Membership Event: 7 October 2014 Emergency Preparedness: How would HEY respond to a major incident?. What is a major incident?. For the NHS a major incident is defined as:
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Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust Membership Event: 7 October 2014 Emergency Preparedness: How would HEY respond to a major incident?
What is a major incident? For the NHS a major incident is defined as: “Any occurrence that presents serious threat to the health of the community, disruption to the service or causes (or is likely to cause) such numbers or types of casualties to require special arrangements to be implemented by hospitals, ambulance trusts or primary care organisations” NHS Commissioning Board Command and Control Framework For the NHS during significant incidents and emergencies (January 2013)
What are our responsibilities? • To plan for, and respond to a wide range of incidents and emergencies that could affect health or patient care • To ensure highest level of service is maintained, regardless of what might happen (Civil Contingencies Act (2004)) • To have trained, competent staff and facilities available 24/7 to effectively manage a major incident or business continuity incident (Health and Social Care Act 2012) • To ensure the needs of those using services continue to be met (CQC Essential Standards)
How prepared are we? • The Trust’s emergency preparedness, resilience and response (EPRR) plans provide a structured framework for staff • The Trust’s Emergency Preparedness intranet site, contains EPRR plans and is accessible to staff • The Trust’s Resilience Committee is responsible for reviewing, testing, validating and updating plans • The Trust’s EPRR plans ensure the organisation maintains essential services, delivers optimum care, minimises disruption and brings about a speedy return to normal levels of functioning in the event of a major incident or business disruption
What about training? • Briefing all new staff during induction • eLearning • Face to face training • Table top exercises • Live major incident exercises • Medical Emergency Response Incident Team (MERIT) • Decontamination • Radiation monitoring
What if a major incident happens? • Incident which can not be managed within normal resources • Emergency Department (receiving / supporting hospital) formally notified by Yorkshire Ambulance Service • Assessment by doctor in charge of ED • “Major Incident Declared Activate Plan” or “Stand By” • ED may be asked to send Medical Emergency Response Incident Team (MERIT) to incident • Hospital switchboard operators initiate cascade call out of staff with specific responsibilities and skills using bleeps / group call systems
Command and Control – once the Major Incident Plan has been declared • Bronze (Operational) Command will lead operational responses in each clinical area • Silver (Tactical) Command, also known as the Hospital Control Team, will lead and co-ordinate the Trust’s operational response • Gold (Strategic) Command will have Executive control of the organisation, command resources, manage external communications and plan recovery
What happens during a major incident? • Determined by scale of incident • Individual and departmental Action Cards allocated – main tasks and sequence followed • Possibly contain impact of incident within ED • Possibly create additional capacity on wards, operating theatres and critical care facilities • Possibly suspend planned operating sessions, OPD clinics, planned admissions, transfer or discharge existing patients – medically assessed • Hospital Lockdown to control site entry / exit
Are any specific areas created during a major incident ? • Incident Command and Information Centre • Staff Holding Area • Patient Transport and Discharge Area • Relatives Centre • Media / Press Centre
How do the Hospital Control Team know what is happening during the incident? • The Hospital Information Team update the Hospital Control Team every 30 minutes • Hospital Information Team confirm: - Adult / Paediatric bed availability - Critical Care facilities available - Operating Theatre availability - Discharge status - Major Incident patient status • The Hospital Control Team provide Gold Command with regular information updates
What happens after “Stand Down” of the major incident? • Immediate Trust debriefing – what went well, lessons learned and opportunity to thank staff • Formal Trust debriefing (within 1 week) – all staff directly and indirectly involved • Formal Inter- Agency Debriefing (YAS, Police, etc) • Final Major Incident report to Trust Board and Trust Development Authority (within 2 weeks) • Review and amend Trust Major Incident Plan • Ongoing staff awareness through Major Incident training and exercises
Thank you. Any Questions?