百宝箱 2007-1-10 11:07 AM
This Is Not A Drill: An Emergency Staffing Plan in Action
The call came in about noon, September 2, 2005. The familiar voice of the nurse administrator on the other end of the line said, "I’m calling in my capacity as emergency planning chief."~+FG;_oVi'`?
I normally worked with her in my job as HR manager at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Since she was the planning chief, that meant I was the Labor Pool Unit leader, and I needed to initiate our emergency staffing plan.-H*]9Q ee)h\D@
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I had always imagined that a call to activate the Labor Pool Unit would make my heart stop. I had dreaded this day, but two things worked together to keep me calm. First, the disaster was caused by a hurricane in Louisiana, nowhere near our campus or community. Second, I was ready, and so was my part of the disaster plan.0^8a[%OJ
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Mayo’s modification of the Hospital Emergency Incident Command System (HEICS), created by the County of San Mateo (California) Emergency Medical Services in 1993, was a strong starting point from which I built my department’s emergency plan. The main premise of HEICS is "to minimize the confusion and chaos common at the onset of a medical disaster by narrowing the activities assigned within a management structure." That’s where the "Labor Pool Unit" title came from.
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Initially, the MEICS ("M" is for Mayo) leadership team thought we might hear from National Disaster Medical System authorities to make 100 to 200 hospital beds available for victims of Hurricane Katrina. That was an "easy" scenario, similar to the "mass casualty" events we routinely plan for. The HR role requires finding additional staff to meet a large influx of patients. ]@h-[c6kw
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