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ED preparation for mass contamination. Jaco Slabbert 18 February 2009. Introduction Types of contamination Preparation Equipment Decontamination Security and Traffic control Media Cape Town perspective. Mass casualty events – ER challenges. High impact, low-probability events
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ED preparation for mass contamination JacoSlabbert 18 February 2009
Introduction • Types of contamination • Preparation • Equipment • Decontamination • Security and Traffic control • Media • Cape Town perspective
Mass casualty events – ER challenges • High impact, low-probability events • Delayed notification • Self presenting patients • Convergence of medical staff • Convergence of the media • Convergence of family, friends • Lack of supplies • Less than 20% of victims receive decon on scene • High index of suspicion
Types of contamination • Chemical • Biological • Radiological • Nuclear
Chemical contamination • Peloponnesian war 429 BC – Spartans and Thebans created a hot fire, and added brimstone and pitch • Henry III – finely pulverized lime used by English sailors • 1899 Boer War – picric acid • WW I – Mustard gas
Tokyo subway sarin attack • 5510 people seeked medical attention • 640 chemically contaminated patients arrived at a single hc facility, using private transport • 23% ED staff contaminated • In one instance 11 doctors were affected treating 2 patients
Preparation • Planning – ER layout, hospital’s capacity, outdoor decontamination area. • Table top exercise • Full-scale, live exercise • Virtual live exercise (VLE)
VLE • University of Alberta Hospital,Edmonton,Ca • 136 simulated patients created,using data from actual pt. encounters • 15 physicians and 18 nurses • MD-delay / Workup-delay • Results:↓ pt flow, under-triage • Conclusions:inexpensive,discovery of new approaches,triage accuracy
Equipment • Protection of staff • Decontamination of casualties • Specialist medical supplies
Personal protective equipment • Levels A – D • A:fully encapsulating chemical-resistant+SCBA • Protect head, face and eyes, the ears, the body, the hands and feet. • Protect against unknown chemicals • B:splash protection,chemical-resistant,SCBA • C:full-faced,air-purifying respirator • Filter change times monitored • D:standard work uniform,gloves,mask
Decontamination equipment • Scissors • Clean, warm or tepid water • Buckets (10 litre capacity) • Decontaminent/liquid soap : 10 ml added to a 10 litre bucket • Sponges/ soft brushes/ wash cloths • Disposable towels,gowns,slippers. Blankets • Plastic bags and plastic bins • Nsaline and drip sets for eye and wound irrigation
Specialist medical supplies • Medical equipment may become contaminated(wheelchairs, stretchers) • Antidotes
Decontamination • ↓absorption and ↓ spread of contamination • Remove clothing : 80-90% of contamination. • Rinse affected areas • Wipe with a sponge or soft brush • Rinse for a second time • 3-5 minutes
Limitations to decontamination • PPE suits require filter change – takes time • Staff needs to be rotated: fatique,heat • PPE suits are cumbersome • Space in decon tents are limited • Decon units can clear 2 ambulatory pts every 10 minutes
Questions about decontamination that await further scientific evaluation • Will victims remove their clothing? • How long will victims remain at the scene awaiting decontamination? • What impact does modesty or inclement weather have on clothing removal? • How long should victims be showered and what water volume is required? • Can victims be effectively managed and communicated to by staff in PPE?
Security and Traffic control • “Lockdown” • Difficulty containing contaminated patients • Family • Media • Ambulances – “clean and dirty”circuits • Nonessential vehicles
Case Report • Singapore – chlorine gas released from pump room at a local swimming pool • 54 pts seeking treatment – 36 presented to Singapore General Hospital over 90 minutes • Hospital Decontamination Station outside of ED • ED Staff donned Level-C protective gear • Entrances to ED were secured
Disaster plan activated • ED re-organized to triage, treat and evacuate victims as well as manage existing patients • HAZMAT incident, not causing severe injuries • Well executed • Valuable lessons learned
Hospital decontamination and the Paediatric patient • Psychosocial needs • Communication • Chaperones • Removal of clothing • Holding infants • Process of decontamination
Cape Town perspective • Fire Service • 7 Medical Battallion – Simonstown • Dilution is the solution • Fire hoses at hospitals • TBH Pharmacy – 160 ampules Atropine in Disaster cupboard in F1, 896 ampules in main pharmacy