Transcript Slide 1
Challenges When Sheltering
Displaced Populations During
Natural & Manmade Disasters
July 15, 2010
Webinar
Sandra Schoenfisch, RN, PhD
Nursing Consultant
Tallahassee, Florida
[email protected]
Learning Objectives
Upon completion of the program, participants will be
able to:
Identify needs of displaced populations
Describe strategies to address special needs &
appropriate triaging
Discuss individual roles and responsibilities of
shelter staff
Identify training and educational needs for staffing
the shelter
Describe the importance of partnerships, discharge
planning & case management
Incorporating lessons learned
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Displaced Population Needs
Housing
Food/Medications
Clothing
Funds
Transportation
Employment
Other
3
Clients’ Perspective
Expectations
Level of Need
Care Givers/Family Needs
Complex Medical Regimens
Special Equipment
Accommodations
Pets
Safety
Other
4
Partnerships
Emergency Management
Community
Other state agencies
Faith based
Other
5
Shelters
Refuge of last resort
Not a hospital, nursing home,
rehabilitation center or a hotel
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Types of Shelters
General Shelters
Special Needs/Medical
Combination
Pediatric
Special Sub-populations
Pet Friendly
“Gypsy” Shelters
Other (hotels, community centers, etc.)
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Emergency Management Role
Identify locations appropriate for
special needs shelters
Maintain Client Registry
Supplies
Staffing (non-medical)
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Shelter Checklist
Connect with local emergency management
Ensure shelter sites are still acceptable & will
accommodate client population
Ensure equipment & supplies are available
Review your staffing plan
Request any needed training and/or updates
Review any unique provisions for your area
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Public Health Roles
Community & responder education
(on-going)
Health & Medical (ESF8 response)
Medical & support staffing of special
needs shelters
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Coordination of Health & Medical
Assessment of health/medical needs*
Health/medical personnel & supplies*
Patient evacuation*
Emergency Medical Services
Mental health & crisis counseling for
responders*
Victim identification/mortuary services
*Key roles and responsibilities that public health nurses fill.
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Types of Special Needs Evacuees
Dialysis
Oxygen Dependent
Electrical Dependent
– CPAP, Nebulizer
Non-Ambulatory
– Walkers
– Wheelchairs, Scooters
– Bed bound
Wound Care
Complicated medication
regimens
Hospice
Trach Care &
Suctioning
Incontinent
Various stages of
dementia
Special Needs Children
Many very frail elderly
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Special Needs Shelter Triage
Initial rapid assessment determines
placement
Respiratory illness triage
Obtain client history once special
needs placement is determined to be
appropriate
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Triage Suggested Tools
Color coding of identification bracelets
Link between color coding and
interaction with other health care
providers
Triage Tags
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Appropriate Clients
Ambulatory (with or without assistive
devices)
Dependant on others for routine care
(eating, walking, toileting, etc.)
Need assistance with medical care
(medication administration, nurse
monitoring, dependant on electrical
equipment)
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Questions for Consideration
Can the client sleep on a cot or mat?
Does the client have a stable medical
condition?
Does the shelter have power backup for
electrically dependant clients?
Does the client have disabilities?
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Special Needs Shelter Operations
Group similar patients together if able
Use standard precautions
Isolation
Caregivers
Supplies
Cots
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Staffing Special Needs Shelters
Asset typing
Guidelines
Volunteers
Medical Reserve Corps
Student volunteers
Retired persons
Strike teams
Local, Regional, State Resources
Federal Resources (US Public Health
Service)
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Special Needs Shelter Training
Special Needs Shelter Operations Training
Special Needs Shelter Management Training
Skills Refresher Training for PHNs
Team Leader Orientation
Psychological First Aid
Other
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Education & Training
Basic Training for All Staff
Refresher Training for All Staff
Seek Assistance from Partners
Operations/Management
NIMS
Attendance: required, strongly
recommended, strictly voluntary
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Challenges & Issues
Changing Scenarios
Equipment (satellite phones,
direct connect, 800 MHz radios)
Decreased Comfort Zone
Adverse environments
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Challenges & Issues cont.
Need to recognize limits of one’s
own knowledge
Creative problem solving & flexible
thinking
The need to participate in
drills/exercises is important and
needs to be done
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What DOES Work?
Training for new staff & partners
Just in time training
Triage
EMT onsite
Security
Mentoring/Coaching
Shifts/Rotations
Translators/ASL onsite
Other
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Other Things That Work!
Case Managers/Discharge Planners
– Placement of all that are financially & medically
eligible
Work to get FEMA dollars for temporary placement in
Assisted Living Facilities, Skilled Nursing Facilities,
& congregate adult living facilities
Use of Nursing Home Administrators to Expedite
Placement (contracted)
Client Tracking System – who came in, who left, and
where did they go…
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Discharge Planning/Case Management
Should start when you plan to open a
shelter!!
Partners are essential
Short-term & Long-term solutions
Think outside the box
Points for creativity
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Placement Options
FEMA Funding for 90-180 days, with possible
expansion to 18 months.
Level 1 – In home with health/personnel care
services
Level 2 – Hotel with home health or wrap around
services
Level 3 – Mobile home, no wrap around services
Level 4 – Mobile home, wrap around services
Level 5 – Respite Care / Adult Day Care
Level 6 – Assisted Living
Level 7 – Skilled Nursing Facility
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Mental Health Issues
Crisis Response Teams
– CISD – Department of Health
– Community Mental Health – Department of
Children & Families
Served both at the special needs & general shelters
Medication needs
Mental Health Infrastructure destroyed
– Counseling centers damaged
– Crisis lines down – forwarded to call centers for
mental/behavioral services
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Addressing Safety/Security
Staff safety issues – body mechanics, fatigue,
hydration, and injury
Elderly issues – mobility, medication security, conflict,
stress, fatigue
Transportation issues – feed and medicate prior to
transport, bring snacks & fluids
Equipment issues – trip risks, wet surfaces, oxygen
tank security, generators, extension cords
Uncooperative evacuees
Other
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Staff Augmentation
Medical Reserve Corps
Regional Public Health Response Teams
Emergency Management Assistance
Compact (EMAC)
Federal Assistance
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Provide emergency
health advisories
Boiled water notices
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Mold
Flood Waters
Special Needs Updates
DEET Distribution & Mosquito
Protection
Food Safety
Heat Exhaustion
Home Repair Safety
Evacuation Routes
Resource Access
Other
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All Hazards Preparedness
Rules of Engagement
1. Meet the Needs of Victims
2. Meet the Needs of the Responders
3. See Rule #1
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PREPAREDNESS CYCLE
Plan
Evaluation
Train
32
Association of State and Territorial Directors of
Nursing (ASTDN) Position Paper
The Role of Public Health Nurse (PHN) in
Emergency Preparedness and Response first
version in 2002, revised 2007
Applied twelve (12) selected EP core
competencies to PHN practice
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Phases of Disaster Linked to the Nursing Process
Disaster
Phase
Mitigation
Preparedness
Response
Recovery
Definition
Assessment
Planning
Implementation
Evaluation
Prevent a disaster
or emergency;
Minimize
vulnerability to
effects of an event.
Assess a group of
elderly citizens for
their awareness
about preventing
heat stroke.
Develop community
education plan to
increase awareness
about preventing
heat stroke.
Conduct community
education activities
to increase
awareness about
preventing heat
stroke.
Evaluate community
education activities
on preventing heat
stroke.
Assure capacity to
respond effectively
to disasters and
emergencies.
Assess the
populations at risk
for special needs
during a disaster.
Develop plans to
care for special
needs populations
during a disaster.
Conduct training,
drills and exercises
related to care of
special-needs
persons.
Evaluate plans for
serving populations
with special needs.
Provide support to
persons and
Communities
affected by
disasters and
emergencies.
Serve on a response
team to determine
the impact and
specific health needs
of hurricane
survivors. Triage
victims.
Develop plans to
rotate staff on
response teams to
prevent stress and
burnout among
responders.
Deploy staff to
shelters after a
hurricane, in
accordance with
local and/or state
emergency response
plans.
Participate in after
action reviews
and/or debriefings to
evaluate quality of
health services
provided and
lessons learned.
Restore systems
to functional level.
Serve on team to
assess community
assets and potential
for recovery from a
recent flood.
Collaborate with
partners and
community leaders
to plan long-term
recovery priorities
after a flood.
Participate in
restoring community
services after a
flood.
Serve on team to
evaluate long-term
impact on persons
displaced by a flood.
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Documents & Forms
Special Needs Shelter Walkthrough Survey
Supply & Equipment List
Oxygen Packs
Staff & Volunteer Line list
Shelter Isolation Precautions
Shelter Guidance Respiratory
Shelter Intake Form
Daily Census Report
Media Relations Guide
Job Action Sheets
Level of Care Matrix
And Much More
http//:www.doh.state.fl.us/PHNursing/SpNS/SpecialNeedsShelter.html
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Leadership & Management in
Shelters
Resources
252, F.S.; 381, F.S. www.leg/state/fl.us/statutes
64-C, F.A.C. www.flrules.org
Regional Public Health Response Teams Recruitment and Deployment Guidelines for CHD
Public Health Preparedness Training Catalog www.doh.state.fl.us/demo/PHPTrainingCatalog
Columbia University School of Nursing Center for Health Policy. (2002). Bioterrorism and
emergency readiness competencies for all public health workers. Atlanta (GA): Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
Council on Linkages Between Academia and Public Health Practice (2001). Core competencies for
public health professionals. Retrieved April 29, 2007 from
http://www.phf.org/competencies.htm#view
Incident Command and NIMS Training/FEMA http://training.fema.gov/emiweb/IS/crslist.asp
American Red Cross
Medical Reserve Corps http://www.medicalreservecorps.gov
http://www.redcross.org
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Recommended Reading
Gebbie, KM & Qureshi, K. (2002). Emergency and disaster
preparedness: Core competencies for nurses: what every
nurse should but may not know. American Journal of
Nursing.102:46 Medical Reserve Corps
California Public Health Nursing Disaster Handbook
www.phncalifornia.org
ASTDN Position Paper “The Role of Public Health Nurses in
Emergency Preparedness and Response” www.astdn.org
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Recommended Reading
Columbia University School of Nursing Center for Health Policy. (2002).
Bioterrorism and emergency readiness competencies for all public health
workers. Atlanta (GA): Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Council on Linkages Between Academia and Public Health Practice (2001).
Core competencies for public health professionals. Retrieved April 29, 2007
from http://www.phf.org/competencies.htm#view
FEMA. (21 March, 2006a). State and Local Guide (SLG) 101:Guide for AllHazard Emergency Operations Planning. Retrieved April 29, 2007 from
http://www.fema.gov/plan/gaheop.shtm
US Department of Homeland Security. (2006). National Response Plan.
Retrieved April 29, 2007 from
http://www.dhs.gov/xprepresp/committees/editorial_0566.shtm
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Contact information for
Dr. Sandra Schoenfisch
Sandra Schoenfisch, RN, PhD
Nursing Consultant
Tallahassee, Florida
Email: [email protected]
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Acknowledgements
New
England Alliance for Public Health
Workforce Development
Boston
University School of Public Health
Massachusetts
Association of Public Health
Nurses (MAPHN)
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