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The Transitional Medical Model (TMM) Framework For Pandemic Readiness and Response Plans. Paul Rega MD, FACEP Christopher Bork, PhD, EMT-B Kelly Burkholder-Allen, RN, MSEd The University of Toledo College of Medicine Department of Public Health & Preventive Medicine. Pandemic.
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The Transitional Medical Model (TMM) FrameworkFor Pandemic Readiness and Response Plans Paul Rega MD, FACEP Christopher Bork, PhD, EMT-B Kelly Burkholder-Allen, RN, MSEd The University of Toledo College of Medicine Department of Public Health & Preventive Medicine
Pandemic • The Enigmatic Disaster
Most Disasters • Limited • Transparent • Obvious to all • Well-defined • Beginning • End • Help will come from somewhere
Response to most disasters • Based upon hazard analysis • Based upon risk assessment • Based upon precedent
Mitigation, Preparedness, Response, and Recovery • The broad strokes are sufficient for most disasters • 40-Car Pileup • Tornado through a Trailer Park • Explosion in the Downtown district
Pandemics are not your typical disasters • Precedents are few • Last major precedent (1918) before most people existed • Not transparent • No definite beginning, middle or end • External assistance may arrive late, if at all • Local response: Prominent
Pandemics: Outside of the Public’s Scope of Consciousness • Disproportional morbidity & mortality • Social distancing measures • Fractured infrastructure (schools, businesses, places of worship, etc.) • Limited personnel • Limited resources
Pandemics: Outside of the Public’s Scope of Consciousness • Prioritizing certain population subsets to receive those resources • Depriving other subsets from receiving those resources • For example, allocation of scarce resources • Cancellation of escapist activities
Potential Ramifications • Economic chaos • Worsening and prolonged effects on personal and communal mental health • Needless illness and death • Greater potential for violence • Domestic • Non-domestic • Risk of child exploitation and victimization • Prolonged interval of time to return to the community’s baseline infrastructure
What must be recognized… • Any disaster response begins locally • Don’t depend on external agencies to determine the fate of your jurisdiction • Any response must be early, incremental, and temperate • Reference: 1918 response
Why early, incremental and temperate? • Puts your jurisdiction ahead of events • Allows acclimatization for all citizens • Builds public confidence • Cost-effective • A “ramping-up or ramping-down” would ultimately be cheaper than an all-or-none action.
The Transitional Medical Model (TMM) • Intermeshed with mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery concepts • Incorporates a strategy that bridges the activities of normal day-to-day living with those that are employed during a potential pandemic.
The Paradigm • Traditional Medical Phase • Mitigation & planning • The Transitional Medical Phase • Level 1 • Level 2 • Level 3 • Level 4 • The Catastrophic Phase • The Recovery Phase • Recovery Response
Moving from Traditional to Transitional • The evolution from the Traditional Phase to the Transitional Phase is not dependent upon external agencies, but upon the Public Health Commissioner. • All disasters are local
Traditional Medical Phase • There is no evidence of an actual or imminent disaster threatening your jurisdiction. • The principal activities: planning and education • The community’s efforts are directed towards activities that will help that community prepare for a response to any disaster, infectious or otherwise. • identification of resources, • acquisition of resources, • education of professionals and the public, and • development, testing and refinement of response strategies.
The Transitional Medical Model For details: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed
Mission: Transitional Medical Phase • To augment, enhance, and empower a jurisdiction’s medical infrastructure in order to provide medical care to all with skill and compassion, regardless the venue; • To mitigate the worst medical, psychological, ethical, societal, legal consequences of a pandemic thereby minimizing the proportion of ill and dead; • To preserve the community’s infrastructure as long as possible.
Transitional Phase, Level 1 • Trigger:Distant outbreak • Description: • No change in care delivery because there is no definitive pandemic. • Information suggests a pandemic could be developing. • Principal actions: • Place the jurisdiction on alert • Urge stakeholders and citizens to review their plans and commence preparations to respond efficaciously. (Please refer to TMM Quickview document for details on triggers)
Transitional Phase, Level 2 • Trigger: • Multiple distant outbreaks • Significant morbidity/mortality • Description: • The possibility of a pandemic is more real than theoretical. • Stakeholders and public should begin activating their plans. • Principal Actions: • Expand delivery via expanding capability of extant practices and clinics
Transitional Phase, Level 3 • Trigger: • Outbreak approaching jurisdiction • Outbreak repercussion felt within jurisdiction • Description: • A significant outbreak is occurring. • It has begun to impact your jurisdiction. • Principal Actions: • Begin activation of teams • Begin activation of Alternate Care Sites
Transitional Phase, Level 4 • Trigger: • Definite outbreak occurring in your jurisdiction • Morbidity/mortality escalating • Description:Active and passive surveillance have revealed the pandemic has arrived in the jurisdiction and surrounding regions. • Principal Actions: • Functional teams • Functional ACSs • Public aware • Care to all, but at non-traditional venues
The Catastrophic Phase • Mission: “Providing the Greatest Good for the Greatest Number” • Trigger:jurisdiction losing its support infrastructure • Description: • Deterioration at all healthcare sites: patient volume, lack of personnel, and/or inadequate resources. • Numbers of fatalities overwhelm mortuary venues. • Hospitals are inundated with critical care patients. • Disruption of infrastructural services at all levels • Prioritization of care delivery • Re-allocation of scarce resources to certain patients • Inclusion criteria • Exclusion criteria • Palliative care
The Recovery Phase • Mission: Restoration of normalcy or “business as usual” • Triggers: • Your jurisdiction: Drop in ILI among its citizens • Ohio: Drop in ILI among its citizens • The United States: Drop of ILI among its citizens • CDC has declared the pandemic is on the wane. • Description: • Occurs when the Public Health Commissioner believes that all the indicators point to an end of the outbreak. • The measures in place to mitigate the spread of disease are not removed too quickly. • A gradual liberalization from these measures coupled with an intense epidemiological evaluation of the jurisdiction’s health status in order to witness any adverse rise in infectious cases.
Major Take-Home Point of the Transitional Medical Model • If done early and thoroughly, your jurisdiction may neverexperience the worst ramifications of the pandemic. • Witness: Communities during the 1918 Pandemic who instituted early and prolonged strategies fared better than others.
Someone has to lead… Why not the stakeholders in our jurisdiction?
Next Steps • Identify the key stakeholders • Compare the jurisdiction’s plans to the sample plans in the toolkit • Determine whether and how the jurisdiction's plans fit with the TMM levels • Begin the dialog about what each stakeholder is doing during each level
Next Steps (contd.) • Modify response plans as needed to develop a congruence of response • Form an Exercise Planning Team and use the toolkit to test your plans. See “Creating Exercises Using the Transitional Medical Model” in this toolkit.