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Application of Incident Action Plan and Forms – Loss of Water. Hospital Incident Command System.
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Application of Incident Action Plan and Forms – Loss of Water Hospital Incident Command System This material has been developed for training purposes; do not share, distribute, transmit or reproduce without prior written consent of California Hospital Association This course was developed by the CHA Hospital Preparedness Program with grant funds provided by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response Hospital Preparedness Program and awarded by the California Department of Public Health. No part of this course or its materials shall be copied or utilized for monetary gain.
Demonstrate the Incident Action Planning Process Demonstrate the use of HICS Forms Implement the use of the Incident Response Guides Objectives
Scenario Based Implementation Discuss and rehearse practical implementation of the Incident Action Planning process utilizing HICS forms and the Incident Response Guides Utilize a “Table Top” learning process
Incident Action Planning Assess the Situation Set the Operational Period Determine Safety Priorities & Establish Control Objectives Determine Operational Period Objectives Determine Strategies & Tactics Determine Needed Resources Issue Assignments Implement Actions Reassess & Adjust Plans
Scenario • Without warning, the main water supply line to the hospital breaks, disrupting water service to the entire facility • The hospital’s water systems, including potable water supply are non-functional • Local water sources and vendors are not impacted • Large volume of water is flowing out from beneath pavement on main roadway in front of hospital causing access challenges (no hospital flooding)
Scenario • Services, including food and radiology are disrupted • Toilets and hand washing areas are not functioning and alternate methods must be provided • Time: 2300 • Weather: Clear, 68º F, no winds
First Actions • Water has been disrupted for 15 minutes • Time until repaired: Unknown • Is this an incident? • What are your first actions? • Who is in charge?
Incident Action Planning Step 1: Assess the Situation • Use HICS form 214: Operational Log • Complete HICS form 201: Incident Briefing • Event History and Current Actions Summary • Begin form 202: Incident Objectives • Weather/environmental implications for period
Naming the Incident • The Incident Commander names the incident • If the incident is a community-based incident, the appropriate jurisdiction will name the incident (e.g., county, city, EMS) • The incident name should be documented on all forms
Incident Action Planning Step 2: Set the Operational Period • HICS form 202: Incident Objectives • Operational Period Date/Time • Incident Commander sets the Operational Period • Based on number of simultaneous activities • How quickly the situation is changing • An Operational Period breaks the incident down into manageable timeframes
Incident Action Planning Step 3: Determine Safety Priorities & Control Objectives • Identify Command & Control Objectives (these are the overarching objectives that will last throughout the whole response) • HICS form 202: Incident Objectives
Control Objectives • Utilize the Incident Response Guide • Water Loss: • Conserve water and restore water supply • Identify and obtain alternate sources of potable water • Maintain patient care management • Monitor heating and cooling systems
Scenario Update #1 • It has been 30 minutes since the water main break • The hospital is only accessible to emergency vehicles
Side Note: Safety Officer Tasks • Assess the Safety issues • What hazards exist and what precautions need to be taken • Ensure safe entry/exit of essential personnel to and from hospital • Ensure safety of patients, visitors, staff in non-impacted areas • Ensure hydration/sanitation is addressed • Complete form 261 – Incident Action Plan Safety Analysis
Side Note: Public Information Officer Tasks • Prepare a statement for the media • Prepare a statement for the staff, patients and visitors (e.g., situation, status, safety precautions, next update time) • The statements need approval from the Incident Commander • Coordinate consistent messaging with the Joint Information Center (JIC) or with law enforcement PIO
Side Note: Liaison Officer • Who or what entity operates as the county contact/MHOAC, and how do you contact? • Who should be notified of the situation? • Who should be notified of hospital status? Bed status? How? • Who is the source of resources in your local plan? (e.g., local EMS Department Operations Center, PHD Department Operations Center, County/City Emergency Operations Center) • Needs should be determined prior to the incident
Side Note: Documenting your Actions • Utilize HICS forms • Form 214 - Operational Log
Incident Action Planning Step 4: Determine Operational Period Objectives • Document on HICS 204 – Branch Assignment List • They are based on the Control Objectives • These are based on what is desired to be achieved by the Section in that operational period • Objectives need to be SMART (Simple, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time Sensitive & Task Oriented)
Operational Period Objectives • A common problem during exercises is that Sections/Branches don’t develop their objectives promptly • Report top 3 objectives
Incident Action Planning Step 5: Determine Strategies & Tactics • Strategies & tactics are how your Section/Branch is going to achieve the objectives • What actions do you need to take? • Use your facility response plans and Incident Response Guides • Record strategies & tactics on form 204 – Branch Assignment List
Incident Action Planning Step 6: Determine Needed Resources • Where can patients be moved to? • What personnel resources do you need? • What equipment and/or supplies do you need? • What resources do you need in the patient collection/holding area? • What transport resources do you need? • Document resource activities: • Resources assigned (form 204) • Resource requests (form 213) • Actions taken to utilize and obtain resources (form 214)
Incident Action Planning Step 7: Issue Assignments • Who will be assigned to the units? • Fill in the assignments on form 204 – Branch Assignment List • Are there other branches that need activated?
Incident Action Planning • For the first Operational Period the Incident Action Plan should be done within 30-45 minutes • What makes up the Incident Action Plan? • Form 201 - Incident Briefing • Form 202 - Incident Objectives • Form 203 - Incident Assignments • Form 204 - Branch Assignments • Form 261 - Incident Action Plan Safety Analysis • The Planning Section compiles the forms to create the Incident Action Plans
Incident Action Planning Step 8: Implement Actions • Put your activities / plans into action • What are some of these activities?
Scenario Update #2 • It is now 0030 – 1.5 hrs into the incident • Utility workers expect to repair the damage and restore water service to the hospital within 10 – 12 hours • What are your major concerns?
Incident Action Planning Step 9: Reassess & Adjust Plans • Towards the end of the operational period, you will need to evaluate status • Repeat steps 1-8 • Update the forms • Evaluate and/or update your Operational Period Objectives • This creates your Incident Action Plan (game plan) for the next operational period
Scenario Update #3 • It is now 4 hours into the incident • Utility repair personnel have encountered complications and report water may not be restored for 3 days • What issues should be considered?
How are we doing? • What are things we need to remember to do? • Share information • Recovery / Restoration • After Action Report • Corrective Actions Plan
developed by the California Hospital Association’s Hospital Preparedness Program www.calhospitalprepare.org HICS Basics Part 2 Application of Incident Action Plan and FormsLoss of Water This material has been developed for training purposes; do not share, distribute, transmit or reproduce without prior written consent of California Hospital Association This course was developed by the CHA Hospital Preparedness Program with grant funds provided by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response Hospital Preparedness Program and awarded by the California Department of Public Health. No part of this course or its materials shall be copied or utilized for monetary gain.