Health Care Delivery Model for Pandemic Influenza Island County Health Department’s Approach Presented by: Roger S Case, MD October 2007 Thanks to Charron Plumer and staff of.

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Transcript Health Care Delivery Model for Pandemic Influenza Island County Health Department’s Approach Presented by: Roger S Case, MD October 2007 Thanks to Charron Plumer and staff of.

Health Care Delivery Model
for Pandemic Influenza
Island County Health
Department’s Approach
Presented by:
Roger S Case, MD
October 2007
Thanks to Charron Plumer and staff of Tacoma-Pierce County Health
Dept for making this presentation possible.
GOAL
Increase Health Care
capacity in Island County
during a medical
catastrophe
Minimize morbidity &
mortality
Island County Flu Impact
A WORST CASE SCENARIO
24,000 patients seek care (30% attack rate)
Up to 5,200 will be hospitalized (22 % of those ill)
Up to 720 will require ICU care (3% of hospitalized)
Up to 950 will die (4% of those seeking care)
Beds and staff exceeded quickly – 25 beds currently
staffed
Pandemic Severity Index
CDC 2/07
Case Fatality
Ratio
> 2%
Projected Number of
Deaths in Island County
Category 5
> 480
Category 4
240 - < 480
0.5% - < 1%
Category 3
120 - < 240
0.1 - < 0.5%
Category 2
Category 1
24 - < 120
< 24
1 - < 2%
< 0.1%
Based on a population estimate of 80,000 with 30% ill
Work Group Objectives
Engage community health care partners in
developing model
Design and implement a coordinated
system to deliver medical care during a
medical catastrophe
Develop triage protocols to guide
allocation of scarce resources, e.g.
equipment, staff, supplies
Initial Work Group –
Planning Organization
Facilities
Logistics
Operations
Started early in 2005
Community
Medical
Coordination
Triage and
Treatment
Protocols
Pre-Tier 1, Tier 1
& Tier 2
Concept of Operations
Care delivered
outside of hospitals
– Home
– Alternate care facilities
– divert pts away from
ERS
– Hospitals –
acute/critical care
Care site based on
severity of illness &
resources
Concept of Operations
Altered Standards of Care
Insured/non-insured seen
– Relax insurance limitations
– Discussion elevated to state
level
– Legal consultant
Staff 24/7 with community
medical providers and
Medical Reserve Corps
Ethical Considerations
To guide our Planning, we rely on the following principles:
• To the greatest extent possible, everyone in Island County who
becomes ill should be given the best care we can provide at that
time, regardless of that person’s social worth.
• To maximize our ability to implement this model, caregivers who
work directly with patients and essential healthcare support workers
should be considered a priority group for all preventive healthcare
resources.
• If resources become so scarce that we cannot provide all patients
with the care they need, care should be given to the patients likely to
receive the most benefit from those resources.
• If it should become necessary to restrict individual liberties for the
sake of the public health, the least restrictive interventions likely to
be effective should be employed.
Four Tiered System*
Pre-Tier 1 – EMS (including 911) and Health
Care Information lines
Tier 2 – Neighborhood Emergency Help Centers
– Triage, Outpatient Treatment and Referral function
Tier 3 – Alternate Care Facilities
– Expanded bed capacity with limited care
Tier 4 – Hospitals
– Higher acuity, lower census
*Adapted Based on Modular Emergency Medical System
Developed for mass casualty bioterrorism events
US Army Soldier and Biological Chemical Command 6/1/02
Facilities
?? NEHC Tier 1 sites
identified
?? ACFS Tier 2 sites
identified
Memoranda of
Agreements
Facilities will be
standardized
Pre-Tier 1
EMS - 911 medical dispatching
protocols developed
Not all calls will get an ambulance
EMS empowered to triage
patients to appropriate levels
Including care and comfort at
home
Nurse Triage Lines
– Similar protocols to 911
– Can refer patients to Tier 1 or send
EMS
Pre-Hospital Straw Person
Pre-Tier 1/Phone Triage
Y
Y
Y
Call to 911
or other
public safety
answer point
EMS
sent
Require
Transport?
Hypoxic,
Hypertensive
N
Unstable?
Tx to
Tier 2
N
N
Evaluated by
Nurse line
Call to
Y
Nurse line*
Refer to
Tier 1
NEHC***
Needs in-person
evaluation?
Consideration: special access
phone # for high priority
personnel to access nurse line
Tx to
Tier 3
Y
N
Refer patients to Tier 1
location to p/u AVM
AVM**
eligible
Create mechanism for nurse to
communicate with Tier 1 =
nurse phone order AVM
Arrange for
AVM
N
*Nurse lines are run by multiple health care organizations, will require standardization between
organizations and agencies. May also require standardization across counties.
**Antiviral medications
***Neighborhood Emergency Help Center
Info only
Tier 1 - Triage & Neighborhood Emergency
Help Center (NEHC)
Triage and basic evaluation
– dispense antiviral medications
Patient receiving area; separate
pts by severity of illness
Flu kits and home care
information
Holding areas - Pts waiting on
transport to higher tier
Tier 2
For patients referred from Tier 1,
or step down from Tier 3
– Persons not sick enough for hospital,
need care that cannot be provided in
home, or palliative care
Short stay (I.e. dehydrated)
Limited testing capability
O2 saturations, Chemistry/glucose
Oxygen, IV fluids
Antiviral medications, abx for
secondary bacterial pneumonia
Tier 3
Alternate Care Facilities
Pre-id sites for surge capacity medical care
Mostly high schools
– Geographically located around Island County
Facility set up in 50 bed units
Continue to expand until full capacity
Tier 3 (continued)
Rest area for family care givers
Palliative care area
Occupational Health office
Functioning cafeteria – 24/7
Staff break and sleeping area
Chapel & morgue
Children under 3 y/o receive care
at Tier 3 – eliminates need for cribs
Posters, videos w/ care instructions
& infection control
Patient Tracking Systems
Tracking system – “Iris”
– Bar coded wrist band
– Tracks from first physical contact until
disposition
– Can be used to track staff as well
Joint Information Center
Risk Messaging
Switch to alternate care system
Home health care information
How to contact health information line
When to enter the system and go to Tier 1
How to get to nearest Tier 1 Site
– What to bring: clean linens/pillow, personal
hygiene products, routine meds, one family
caregiver
Staffing
Medical Coordination and
Recruiting
– Medical Reserve Corps
– Registration
– JITT - Safety training, Triage and
treatment protocols, Job Action
Sheets, Infection Control, PPE
Medical Reserve Corps
A group of community
based medical volunteers
called upon to serve in
large-scale emergency,
natural disaster, or public
health incident
Liability Concerns
Liability concerns permeate
the discussion
Pandemic or mass casualty
event creates uncertainty
and unpredictability as to
how courts will interpret the
legal standards in medical
malpractice actions
Liability
WA State assumes considerable
liability for damage to property, injury
or death that might occur during an
emergency or medical disaster for
registered worker
Generally, Emergency workers,
including state and local employees
are indemnified by the State; state will
pay judgment for public employee
who is found liable (if not due to gross
negligence or willful misconduct)
Covered (Registered) Volunteer
emergency workers are immune from
liability
Liability
In order for an emergency worker to be
protected, emergency management must have
assigned a mission number to approved
missions and other emergency activities
Citizens who are commandeered into service
are entitled to the same privileges, benefits and
immunities
Covered volunteer emergency workers are
granted immunity only when engaged in a
covered activity and acting within the scope of
his/her duties, under the direction of a local
emergency management or law enforcement
Worker Registration
Critical to register emergency
workers
Registered workers receive
training on medical disaster
system
Statewide medical disaster
system standard of care is
implemented (proposed)
Emergency Workers vs. Covered
Volunteer Emergency Worker
Emergency Worker = Any person
who is registered with a local
emergency management
organization or the state military
dept
Holds an ID card issued by the
above for the purpose of engaging
in authorized emergency
management activities
Or is an employee of WA State or
any political subdivision called upon
to perform emergency management
activities
Covered Volunteer
Emergency Worker
An Emergency Worker, such
as an MRC volunteer, not
receiving compensation as an
emergency worker from the
state or local government.
Is not a state or local
government employee
Registration critical
Altered Standards of Care
Community clinical
decision makers will be
identified who will assess
the evolution of the illness
and coordinate existing
and changing standards of
care within PC and the
State
Altered Standards of Care
Principles
Goal of an organized and coordinated response
to a mass casualty event should be to maximize
the number of lives saved
Rather than doing everything possible to save
every life, it will be necessary to allocate scarce
resources in a different manner to save as many
lives as possible
Process must be fair and clinically sound,
transparent and judged by public to be fair
Triage protocols need to be flexible as event
grows
Statewide Standards
Suggested that WA approach the issue of
Altered Standards of Care in a Statewide
manner
Seek approval of proposed altered standards
by professional organizations
Submit to accreditation organizations for
review
Adoption of statewide standard of care would
give medical providers increased guidance
and increased likelihood of liability protection
Tier 3 Work Group Goals
Increase hospital capacity to
care for acutely ill during a
pandemic flu
Identify patient type
categories to facilitate triage
during a pandemic flu
Develop triage guidelines to
guide allocation of scare
hospital/ICU resources
Hospitals
PH, EMS
Military
DEM
Develop Response Matrix
outlining triage guidelines
Participants
Work started early January 2007
Assumptions
Pandemic severity index, WHO
Phases and Federal Response
Stages will be the triggers
guiding response and
implementing the tiered triage
protocols
Standards of Care will be
altered as incident progresses
and emergency declared
Focus on keeping health care
systems functioning
Patient Types
A matrix has been developed that outlines and defines patient types.
Four types have been identified: RED, YELLOW, GREEN, and BLUE
RED – very poor prognosis, expected to
die within 2-3 days
•Massive respiratory failure – overwhelming entry
of inflammatory cells (Cytokine storm)
•Rapid onset of SOB, cyanosis, tachypnea
•This type of response likely to occur in the
younger, healthier persons – 15-40 years old
•If treated in ICU/ventilators – survival rate – 50%
Ref: Grattan Woodson, M.D. 2/13/07
Patient Types
YELLOW – Very ill, survival past 3 days
•Pulmonary and/or cardiovascular complications
•Elderly, very young, adults with chronic medical
condition
•Significant co-morbidities, e.g. diabetes, heart
disease, HTN, asthma
•Pregnant women at high risk
•Survival rate is 85% if treated with IV abx, ICU
and ventilator when needed
•50% mortality rate if left at home
Ref: Grattan Woodson, M.D. 2/13/07
Patient Types
GREEN – greatest chance of survival
•Majority of those ill with pan flu
•Dependent upon others (household members) to care for them
•Fever, cough, malaise
•No cyanosis, hypoxia, or hemorrhage
•Co-morbidities under control
•Survival rate – 99% if admitted to hospital when needed; 95% if
treated at home
•Death primarily due to dehydration
Ref: Grattan Woods, M.D. 2/13/07
Patient Types
BLUE – near death
– May be unconscious
– Will receive palliative
care
Tier 3 Patient Typing Definitions
RED (Type 1 Patient)
Prognosis: Poor: die within 2-3 days
of onset of symptoms
Age: 15-40 year -olds due to
cytokine storm
Clinical signs: rapid onset SOB,
cyanosis, tachypnea, bleeding from
sites
YELLOW (Type 2 Patient)
Prognosis: Very ill, survival past 3 days;
pulmonary and/or cardiovascular
complications.
Age: All elderly, very young, or adults with
chronic medical disorders
Clinical Signs: Often improve then relapse
with malaise, aches, pains and then fever.
Significant co-morbidities: Emphysema,
chronic bronchitis, children with asthma,
diabetes, coronary heart disease, high
BP. Ppregnant women are at high risk
Survival: 85% survival rate with IV
antibiotics, diagnostic testing, ICU, vent
when needed.
50% mortality rate if left at home
Survival: 50% survival rate w/ access to
ICU/Vents; 95% mortality if left at home
GREEN (Type 3 Patient)
Prognosis: Greatest chance of
survival; majority of those ill with flu;
dependent on others for care.
Clinical Signs: Fever, cough, malaise,
no cyanosis, hypoxia or hemorrhage.
None or controlled co-morbidities.
Survival: 99% survival rate if admitted
to hospital when needed; 95 %
survival rate if treated at home.
*Death is primarily due to dehydration.
BLUE (Patients in
extremis)
Near death
Unconscious
Supportive care only
Triggers: Phases and
Stages of a Pandemic
WHO (World) Phases
Phase 6 – Pandemic Phase:
increased and sustained
transmission in general
population
Fed Govt Response Stages
•
Stage 3 – Widespread
human outbreak in multiple locations
overseas
•
Stage 4 – First human case
in N. America
•
Stage 5 – Spread throughout U.S.
•
Stage 6 – Recovery & prep for
subsequent waves
Response Guidelines
Triggers
Fed Govt Stage 4
First human cases in
North America
1-2 ICU cases in Is. Co.
Full hospital resources
Category 1 – Usual
Standards of Care
Actions
Alert and Standby Tiers 1
&2
Conduct JITT of staff
Admit all patient types
Refer Green patients for
home health monitoring
Normal Critical care
admission
Elective procedures
continue
Response Guidelines
Triggers
Fed Govt Stage 5
Spread throughout U.S.
Pan Flu in W. WA
Up to 10 ICU cases in IC
Diminished Hospital
capacity
Emergency Declaration
Category II – Altered
Standards of Care
Actions
Triage ED patients to Tier
1, as appropriate
Refer GREEN patients to
Tier 1
Admit to CC based on
ventilator, homodynamic
support needs
Admit YELLOW and RED
when ICU beds available
Once ICU beds filled,
YELLOW patients receive
priority
Response Guidelines
Category II Actions (continued)
Lift EMTALA by decree of Declaration of
Emergency
Activate surge capacity and emergency
response plans
ACFS – operational
Hospital Command Centers communicate on
patient triage and movement
Elective procedures decreased
Implement early discharge protocols
Response Guidelines
Category III– Altered Standards of Care
Triggers
Fed Govt Stage 5:
Community Spread
ICU cases greater than 10
Hospital resources are nearly
or completely diminished
Category III– Altered
Standards of Care
Actions
Implement criteria for inclusion or
exclusion to CC
Admit YELLOW patients with
greater chance of survivability
Assess RED patients case by
case (if ICU bed is available and
no YELLOW patient is waiting,
admit RED)
Refer RED patients to hospice,
Home Health, Tier 2 Palliative
care
Exclude elective surgeries
Emergency surgeries – traumas,
appendectomies will be continued
Response Guidelines
Category III Actions (continued)
Activate resource conservation, conversion
– Convert surgical suites, day surgery, recovery suites
in CC beds
– Shift human resources from OR and Recovery to CC
Cancel elective procedures
Hospital Command Center coordinates
movement of patients between hospitals
Response Guidelines
Category III – Critical Care Inclusion/Exclusion Guidelines
Critical Care Inclusion
Critical Care Exclusion
• Requires ventilator support
• Severe trauma, severe burns, cardiac
arrest
• Requires homodynamic
support
• Severe baseline cognitive impairment
• Advanced untreatable neuromuscular
disease
• Metastatic malignant disease
• Advanced immunocompromised
• Advanced/irreversible neurologic event
• End-stage organ failure
• Elective palliative surgery
Ref: CMAJ 11/21/06: Development of a triage protocol for
critical care during an influenza pandemic
Tier 3 – Triage & Admission
Guidelines
Tier 3 Response Matrix
Categ
ory
Triggers
I
Fed Govt Stage 4: First
human cases in North
America
Usual
Standard
Of Care
1-2 ICU cases in Island
County
Available Admission & Triage
Resources
Guidelines
Full Resources
Action
Admit all Patient types: RED,
YELLOW, & GREEN, if able.
Increase surveillance (tool to be
developed)
GREEN patients: assess home
environment; identify family
members that can provide care;
assess ability to take oral fluids; refer
to home health monitoring as
appropriate (guidelines to be
developed)
Alert and Standby Tier 1 & 2 Sites
Conduct Just-in-time Training of staff
for Tier 1, 2
Acquire anticipated resources (preplanning needs identified)
Critical Care Admission: Normal
triage
Continue Elective procedures
Activate Facility Emergency Plans
Activate EOC & ESF 8
Alert Home Health/Hospice/LTCF to
activate Emergency Plans
Alert status: activation of hospitals’
surge capacity
Tier 3 – Response Matrix
Cate
gory
Triggers
II
Fed Govt. Stage 5:
Community spread
&
Greater than 20 ICU
cases in County
III
Altered
Standard
of Care
Note: gradual transition
from Category II to II.
Available Admission and Triage
Resources
Guidelines
Hospitals maxed
out
Limited
equipment,
supplies, staff
Admit YELLOW patients – those
identified as having greater
survivability.
Critical Care Inclusion: (ref: 1)
- Require ventilator support
- Require homodynamic support
Critical Care Exclusion: (ref 1)
- Severe trauma
- Severe burns
- Cardiac arrest
- Severe baseline cognitive impairment
- Advanced untreatable neuromuscular
disease
- Metastatic malignant disease
- Advanced/irreversible
immunocompromised
- Advanced/irreversible neurologic
event or condition
- End-stage organ failure
- Age > 85
- Elective palliative surgery
RED Patients: assess case by case – if
bed available, and no Yellow patient is
waiting, admit to ICU; when ICU beds
not available, refer RED patients to
hospice, home-health, Tier 2 Palliative
Care
Continue emergent surgical, non-flu
procedures (traumas, appendectomies,
stent replacement)
Action
Activate Critical Care Inclusion/Exclusion
Criteria.
Assess function and effectiveness of
Community Tier 1 & 2 sites (develop
assessment tool).
Activate resource
conservation/conversion: surgical suites,
day surgery, recovery suites into CC
units.
Shift of human resources, i.e. from OR,
Recovery to CC.
Cancel all elective procedures
Implement established withdrawal of
Critical Care guidelines for patients with
non-survivability conditions. (Clarify ??)
Hospitals’ ECO coordinate between
hospitals transfers of yellow patients
where beds available.
Pediatric Triage & Treatment
Current workgroup
Expand Tier 1 and Tier 2 protocols
Incorporate pediatric protocols into Tier 3
matrix
Pediatric modifiers for Patient Type
descriptions
Admission Guidelines of pediatric patients
to adult hospitals
Pediatric Modifiers
Patient Types
Little available in literature
re clinical presentation or
historical models of peds
during pan flu
Additional complexity: family
treatment modality – makes
social distancing more
difficult
Pediatric Patient Types
Red (very poor
prognosis, expected
to die within 2-3 days)
< 15 y.o not likely to
be categorized as
Red Type
– Peds: robust immune
system, primary flu,
suspected high
inflammatory
response, young
adults in good health
>15 y.o likely to have
higher immune
system response,
therefore thought to
be at higher risk
Pediatric Patient Types
Yellow (very ill, survival past 3 days)
– Peds: Main risk is secondary infection creating
compromised health
Green (greatest chance of survival)
– Peds: Very ill and symptomatic, but with a high
survival rate
Blue (near death) – very ill, routed to holding
area
Concept of Operations
Altered Standard of Care for peds
– minimize risk for providers, I.e.
delay of pediatric elective surgery
Use of step-down beds and
reallocation of ICU resources
Develop standing orders and
guidelines for non-pediatric
hospitals to take lower acuity peds
if main pediatric hospital is full
Pediatrics
Demarcation for adult care
physiologically is not very different
for typical child > 15 y.o.
Concern is the social & familial
support needs for child
> 18 y.o independent admission
< 18 y.o. need family present
Pediatrics - Notes
Categories I-III – most children <
15 y.o. manageable by nonpediatricians
< 40 kg. Cannot use adult vents
Ped patient >3 y.o. triaged as a
Green patient can be managed
at Tier 2 site – following
standardized protocols &
accompanied by legal guardian
Skill set for starting IV same in
child > 3 y.o. as in adult
Pediatrics - Notes
Peds already admitted to hospital
at time of emergency declaration
would not have care removed
Need to reserve vents in NICU –
might use survivability of pre-term
neonates as a threshold
Under elevated category
conditions, NICU vents can be
used for babies < 12 months old.
Pediatrics Critical Care Exclusion
• Severe trauma, severe
burns, cardiac arrest
• Severe cognitive
impairment – totally
dependent for all ADLs
• Advanced untreatable
neuromuscular disease
• malignant disease with
poor survivability
• Advanced, irreversible
immunocompromised
• End-stage organ failure
• < 28 weeks gestational
age
• Elective palliative surgery
• Major congenital
anomaly with
decreased survivability
• End-stage pulmonary
disease
• Heart transplant patients
• Unrepaired cyanotic
heart disease patients
Current Work Groups
Respiratory Therapy
Pediatrics
Just-in-time Training
MRC – system
designed; beginning
implementation and
recruitment
Parking Lot
Surveillance Tool: “It’s coming…”
projections, number of cases,
severity
Tool to Activate Tiers 1 & 2 –
phased approach, number and
locations
Tool to assess function &
effectiveness of Tiers 1 & 2
Pregnancy Care
Palliative Care protocols
Criteria for phasing out elective
surgeries
Criteria for withdrawal of support
Summary
A work in progress
Attempt at a needs-based
response to a situation with
scarce resources
Attempts to maximize resource
utilization by applying countywide triage protocol
Standardizes care across county
Addresses application of limited
resources
For more information
Roger S Case, MD @ 360 914-0840
Larry Wall @ 360-661-2924