Sustainability and Culture of Emergency Preparedness Program Assignment

Sustainability and Culture of Emergency Preparedness Program Assignment

BUILDING A CULTURE OF PREPAREDNESS E nsuring a hospital’s preparedness is both an operational necessity and a regulatory expectation. Regulatory agencies including the Joint Commission and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have defined standards to ensure accredited facilities actively prepare for emergencies which affect that

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facility and their role in a communitywide response.1,2 Regulatory standards focus on issues common to disaster events, such as communication and coordination, both within the facility and with community agencies, facility safety and security, staff roles and responsibilities, patient management, patient care resources and support for building systems. Regulatory agencies expect plans to be living documents that are tested frequently and revised as often as necessary to address changes in the organization’s services and capabilities. Planning should focus on defining procedures and securing resources to sustain operations during an event, as well as on how the organization will recover from the disaster. Funds and resources to support emergency preparedness are available through federal grant programs such as the Hospital Preparedness Program (HPP) to support planning for public health threats and the Cities Readiness Initiative, funded by the Centers for Disease Control, for preparedness in large cities and metropolitan areas.3,4 Hospitals participating in these programs not only gain access to programs that will help prepare their facility, but they also may find the programs offer an opportunity to network with key community stakeholders and build support for the community as a whole. In Louisiana, the HPP grant is an integral part of the structure used to create our unique regional coordination plan. 38 Here is a checklist that can help build a culture of preparedness: BUILD RELATIONSHIPS Identify key stakeholders in your community. Consider hospitals, nursing homes, outpatient service providers for dialysis or diagnostic testing and ambulance services, as well as individual practitioners. Meet with local governmental agencies such as the county Office of Emergency Management/Homeland Security and Office of Public Health. Participate in planning meetings hosted by the Local Emergency Planning Committee, Department of Health or other community agency. CREATE PROCESSES THAT SUPPORT EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION Require leaders and staff to learn the Incident Command System so it becomes hardwired into your organization. (See sidebar, page 30.) Establish an internal report telephone line for staff so they can hear current operational status information during an extended disaster. Create templates for internal alerts and messages for team members, patients and guests. Consider electronic tools such as mass notification systems to support timely communication. UNDERSTAND THE HAZARDS IN YOUR COMMUNITY Learn about what kind of industry operates in your area. Ask to work with them to plan for an emergency involving their business. Talk with the state law enforcement agency about hazardous materials that may be transported through your community via interstate highway or railways. Contact the Local Emergency NOVEMBER – DECEMBER 2013 www.chausa.org Planning Committee about its assessment of hazards for the community. Complete a hazard vulnerability analysis for your hospital and share the results with other hospitals and community agencies. PRACTICE YOUR PLAN AND EVALUATE THE RESULTS Seek opportunities to test your emergency operations plan throughout the year. Contact your local airport to ask about participating in FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) drills. Invite community partners, including other hospitals, to participate in emergency plan drills whenever possible. If a practice scenario does not involve community coordination, invite a partner to be an exercise evaluator. Take time to methodically evaluate each exercise or plan implementation. Use the lessons learned to refine detailed action plans — Allyn T. Whaley-Martin NOTES 1. The Joint Commission’s Emergency Management Standards, www.jointcommission.org/new_revised_reqs_emergency_ management_oversight/. 2. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Condition of Participation: Disaster Preparedness, Title 42 CFR 485.727. 3. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Hospital Preparedness Program, www.phe.gov/ Preparedness/planning/hpp. 4. Centers for Disease Control, Cities Readiness Initiative, http://emergency.cdc.gov/ cri/. HEALTH PROGRESS Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. DISASTER READINESS Connections Matter When Disaster Hits By COLETTA C. BARRETT, RN, FACHE, and ALLYN T. WHALEY-MARTIN, M.A. As a net is made up of a series of ties, so everything in this world is connected by a series of ties. If anyone thinks that the mesh of a net is an independent, isolated thing, he is mistaken. It is called a net because it is made up of a series of interconnected meshes, and each mesh has its place and responsibility in relation to other meshes. — Buddha D isasters are the great equalizers, they do not discriminate. All who live in a community that experiences a disaster become “those most in need.” It is during these times that Catholic health care and its commitment to the community have the opportunity to differentiate themselves. Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rouge, La., and other hospitals in the region, face challenges from natural disasters as well as man-made emergencies. In addition to the devastating fallout of hurricanes Katrina and Rita over the past decade, we have contended with prolonged loss of electricity, chemical plant explosions, total closure of the interstate and potential evacuation of the hospital due to an accident involving a tanker truck transporting hazardous chemicals. Our preparedness in these situations has been critical to our ability to respond to the community and continue to take care of patients. This culture of preparedness does not happen by chance. It takes organizational commitment, continuous training, community collaboration and coordination to be successful in the everchanging health care environment. Louisiana’s HEALTH PROGRESS approach to emergency preparedness is grounded in the belief that our community is stronger when we stand as one and act for the common good. For more than a decade, under the leadership of the Louisiana Hospital Association and the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals’ emergency preparedness division, hospitals in the state have worked together.1, 2 Our regional response efforts to build, maintain and expand networks of health care services have focused on communication and resource coordination during communitywide emergency and disaster events. The primary objective is to sustain health care, to keep our doors open and to be present to all those affected. Our shared mission lives in times of disaster. As part of this regional network, each hospital defines its capabilities and works with other health care providers in a coordinated response. www.chausa.org NOVEMBER – DECEMBER 2013 37 BUILDING A CULTURE OF PREPAREDNESS E nsuring a hospital’s preparedness is both an operational necessity and a regulatory expectation. Regulatory agencies including the Joint Commission and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have defined standards to ensure accredited facilities actively prepare for emergencies which affect that facility and their role in a communitywide response.1,2 Regulatory standards focus on issues common to disaster events, such as communication and coordination, both within the facility and with community agencies, facility safety and security, staff roles and responsibilities, patient management, patient care resources and support for building systems. Regulatory agencies expect plans to be living documents that are tested frequently and revised as often as necessary to address changes in the organization’s services and capabilities. Planning should focus on defining procedures and securing resources to sustain operations during an event, as well as on how the organization will recover from the disaster. Funds and resources to support emergency preparedness are available through federal grant programs such as the Hospital Preparedness Program (HPP) to support planning for public health threats and the Cities Readiness Initiative, funded by the Centers for Disease Control, for preparedness in large cities and metropolitan areas.3,4 Hospitals participating in these programs not only gain access to programs that will help prepare their facility, but they also may find the programs offer an opportunity to network with key community stakeholders and build support for the community as a whole. In Louisiana, the HPP grant is an integral part of the structure used to create our unique regional coordination plan. 38 Here is a checklist that can help build a culture of preparedness: BUILD RELATIONSHIPS Identify key stakeholders in your community. Consider hospitals, nursing homes, outpatient service providers for dialysis or diagnostic testing and ambulance services, as well as individual practitioners. Meet with local governmental agencies such as the county Office of Emergency Management/Homeland Security and Office of Public Health. Participate in planning meetings hosted by the Local Emergency Planning Committee, Department of Health or other community agency. CREATE PROCESSES THAT SUPPORT EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION Require leaders and staff to learn the Incident Command System so it becomes hardwired into your organization. (See sidebar, page 30.) Establish an internal report telephone line for staff so they can hear current operational status information during an extended disaster. Create templates for internal alerts and messages for team members, patients and guests. Consider electronic tools such as mass notification systems to support timely communication. UNDERSTAND THE HAZARDS IN YOUR COMMUNITY Learn about what kind of industry operates in your area. Ask to work with them to plan for an emergency involving their business. Talk with the state law enforcement agency about hazardous materials that may be transported through your community via interstate highway or railways. Contact the Local Emergency NOVEMBER – DECEMBER 2013 www.chausa.org Planning Committee about its assessment of hazards for the community. Complete a hazard vulnerability analysis for your hospital and share the results with other hospitals and community agencies. PRACTICE YOUR PLAN AND EVALUATE THE RESULTS Seek opportunities to test your emergency operations plan throughout the year. Contact your local airport to ask about participating in FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) drills. Invite community partners, including other hospitals, to participate in emergency plan drills whenever possible. If a practice scenario does not involve community coordination, invite a partner to be an exercise evaluator. Take time to methodically evaluate each exercise or plan implementation. Use the lessons learned to refine detailed action plans — Allyn T. Whaley-Martin NOTES 1. The Joint Commission’s Emergency Management Standards, www.jointcommission.org/new_revised_reqs_emergency_ management_oversight/. 2. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Condition of Participation: Disaster Preparedness, Title 42 CFR 485.727. 3. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Hospital Preparedness Program, www.phe.gov/ Preparedness/planning/hpp. 4. Centers for Disease Control, Cities Readiness Initiative, http://emergency.cdc.gov/ cri/. HEALTH PROGRESS DISASTER READINESS For example, a large, academic medical center large and small. The Federal Emergency Managesuch as Our Lady of the Lake is expected to pro- ment Agency (FEMA) offers courses in incident vide acute medical care and a fully functioning command through the FEMA independent study emergency department, while a surgical specialty program that will provide a solid foundation for hospital or a long-term acute care hospital pro- anyone in health care.3 Once they learn the convides refuge or space for sheltering the medically cepts of incident command, leaders should be needy and patients dependent upon electric- required to practice using it in drills. ity. Each institution brings a different resource It also is important to focus on processes and and capability to the response table, and all are tools to provide accurate, up-to-date information equally important to supporting the whole com- to team members, patients and guests throughmunity in times of disaster. out a disaster situation. During early stages of any In our area, the group got its start by simply emergency, rumors abound, and it can be hard to asking hospitals to communicate more effec- refocus efforts as the situation evolves. Accurate tively during times of disasters and to work more information can quell anxiety over the unknown closely with public health officials to respond to community need. It now Each institution brings a different has grown to a collaborative statewide network that includes nursing homes, resource and capability to the emergency medical services, dialysis response table, and all are equally and home health providers. Each entity has committed to com- important to supporting the whole municate, collaborate and coordinate resources toward sustaining the com- community in times of disaster. munity. The expanding network allows individual providers greater flexibility and pro- and allow teams to focus on their responsibility vides a depth of support for one another and the to provide care to those affected by the event. community. Both in planning as well as during a response, be Creating a culture of preparedness involves vigilant for instances of miscommunication and four components: Strong relationships, effective resolve them quickly. Small miscommunications communication, clear understanding of potential can work silently to erode vital trust and support. hazards and the testing of response plans. 1. Build strong relationships around a single mission: to provide care for those most vulnerable, those most in need. Developing a collaborative network within a competitive health care community is not easy, so it’s important to establish why preparing together for disasters should be an important priority. The ministry of Catholic health care calls us to serve the whole of our communities, paying special attention to those most vulnerable, those most in need. Communitywide disasters highlight community needs and the fact that no one hospital or provider can meet those needs alone. By working together, the community can make itself whole. 2. Invest time and energy into processes that support effective communication. An “Incident Command System” sets up a management structure that applies to any emergency or disaster and gives community leaders a common language and method of dealing with events HEALTH PROGRESS 3. Understand the potential hazards in the community. Although it’s impossible to anticipate every disaster scenario, understanding the hazards present in the community can provide a foundation for developing an organizational structure for response. Hospitals accredited by the Joint Commission are required to complete a hazard vulnerability analysis annually and to use the information gleaned from the assessment to guide their planning efforts.4 The hazard analysis should be a living document, developed through assessment of hazards specific to a facility and community. Consider vulnerabilities linked to industry and transportation, technological interdependencies, as well as natural threats from severe weather or geography. Learning about local industry and its emergency planning efforts can help the hospital not only to gain a more thorough understanding of the risks, but it also creates the opportunity to develop a relationship potentially critical to an emergency www.chausa.org NOVEMBER – DECEMBER 2013 39 response in the future. Another resource to consider is the state’s National Guard civil support team. The mission of these teams includes advising civilian responders about weapons of mass destruction hazards and how to respond to them. For us, the Louisiana National Guard 62nd Civil Support Team has been a committed partner, supporting hazard identification, training and response support for several years. 4. Practice the plan and evaluate the results. Plans for responding in an emergency are effective only when the team knows how to use them. Training to ensure awareness of hazards is often the first step to securing an effective response. Will the emergency department staff recognize the signs of a chemical exposure? Are physicians alert to symptoms that may signal an emerging biological threat? Subtle signs may be missed in many emergencies because of a lack of experience or awareness that the hazard exists. Following training, invest in exercises, whether a tabletop discussion or full-scale drill, to test the plan and response procedures thoroughly in a safe setting. These exercises allow team members to learn their roles, as well as how to interact with each other. Drills give an opportunity to develop organizational memory that makes responding in an actual event more familiar. It’s also important to practice responding with partners outside the organization whenever possible. Not only will it help establish lines of communication before an event occurs, it also helps clarify what resources do or do not exist in the community. Transparency and humility are very important in these exercises, and all players should feel comfortable to speak openly about their capabilities and needs. Finally, take time to thoroughly evaluate both drills and responses to actual events. Be candid, and use a critical eye to ensure opportunities for improvement are captured. Online tools available through the Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program include detailed guides and forms for planning and evaluation.5 In Louisiana, experience with both natural and man-made disasters has taught us that 40 NOVEMBER – DECEMBER 2013 through collaboration, we gain the strength to face adversity. The relationships established to guide communication have become the foundation of our culture of preparedness, and they are key to our resilience as a health care community. Maintaining them is a top priority to ensure that we can continue our mission of service and care for the vulnerable and those most in need in our community. Many colleagues have asked, “What is the secret to creating a culture of preparedness?” There is no secret. It takes hard work, leadership, commitment to being prepared and a willingness to be a part of a larger response effort (which may mean giving up control and some decision-making). Most importantly, it requires a belief that strength is drawn from being connected and committed to each other. COLETTA C. BARRETT is vice president, mission, Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center, Baton Rouge, La. ALLYN T. WHALEY-MARTIN is director, safety, Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center, Baton Rouge, La. NOTES 1. The Louisiana Hospital Association Emergency Preparedness Program, www.lhaonline.org/display common.cfm?an=1&subarticlenbr=138. 2. Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, Emergency Preparedness Program, www.dhh.louisiana.gov/ index.cfm/subhome/17/n/173. 3. Federal Emergency Management Agency Independent Study program, https://training.fema.gov/IS/crslist. aspx. 4. The Joint Commission requires the hospital to conduct a hazard vulnerability analysis to identify potential emergencies that could affect demand for the hospital’s services or its ability to provide those services; the likelihood of those events occurring; and the consequences of those events. The findings of this analysis are documented. www.jointcommission.org/standards_ information/standards.aspx. 5. Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program, https://www.llis.dhs.gov/hseep. www.chausa.org HEALTH PROGRESS JOURNAL OF THE CATHOLIC HEALTH ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED STATES www.chausa.org HEALTH PROGRESS ® Reprinted from Health Progress, November – December 2013 Copyright © 2013 by The Catholic Health Association of the United States
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Spectrum of Healthcare Facilities in United States Assignment

Spectrum of Healthcare Facilities in United States Assignment

For the next newsletter, you have been asked to write a 1050-1300 word article about the spectrum of health care facilities. In your article:

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Analyze the spectrum of health care facilities that exist in the U.S.
Analyze the purpose and goals of each of the different types of health care facilities in the U.S.
Analyze how the different types of facilities work together.
Analyze who is responsible for the oversight of the facilities.
Analyze the similarities and differences of the health care facilities.

Cite 3 peer-reviewed, scholarly, or similar references to support your paper.

Format your paper according to APA guidelines.

Chapter 7 Community Responsibility and Ethics Discussion

Hospital Emergency Management Planning Paper

Hospital Emergency Management Planning Paper

ORIGINAL RESEARCH Financial Burden of Emergency Preparedness on an Urban, Academic Hospital Bruno Petinaux, MD Department of Emergency Medicine, George Washington University, Washington, DC USA Correspondence: Bruno Petinaux, MD Department of Emergency Medicine George Washington University 2150 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Floor 2B Burns Building Washington, DC 20037 USA E-mail: bpetinaux@mfa.gwu.edu Keywords: cost; Emergency Management Committee; emergency preparedness; financial burden; hospital; salary Abbreviations: EMC =

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Emergency Management Committee EOP = emergency operations plan JC = Joint Commission NIMS = National Incident Management System Received: 31 July 2008 Accepted: 10 September 2008 Revised: 05 December 2008 Web publication: 05 October 2009 Prehospital and Disaster Medicine Abstract This study assessed the direct human resource costs of a hospital’s emergency preparedness planning (in 2005) by surveying participants retrospectively. Forty participants (74% of the identified population) were surveyed. Using the self-reported hourly salary of the participant, a direct salary cost was calculated for each participant. The population was 40% male and 60% female; 65% had a graduate degree or higher; 65% were administrators; 35% were clinicians; and 50% reported that their job description included a reference to emergency planning activities. All participants spent a combined total of 3,654.25 hours on emergency preparedness activities,including 20.1% on personal education/training; 11.6% on educating other people; 39.3% on paperwork or equipment maintenance; 22.2% on attendance at meetings; 5.6% on drill participation; and $36,000 would be incurred by the facility to meet this implementation activity. Meetings included the monthly EMC meetings, other internal planning and preparatory meetings, as well as external planning and preparatory meetings with outside agencies and partners. Limitations This was a single-site study; therefore, the results were influenced by the study population as well as the characteristics of the facility, an urban, academic medical center. Furthermore, the intensity of planning and preparatory efforts, though baseline at all hospital facilities within the US, may be driven differently at certain facilities due to hazard and vulnerability analysis results. The study environment, being an urban, academic center in a major metropolitan area, might have inflated the preparedness efforts. The Greater New York Hospital Association (GNYHA) report found similar trends with academic hospitals outspending community hospitals three to one in their overall preparedness efforts. Hence, direct applications of this study must be viewed in the context of size and type of hospital, a hospital’s commitment to emergency preparedness efforts, and probability and the likely impact of any given disaster on the hospital. Further, the study focused only on the members of the EMC. It must be recognized that facility-wide education and drilling occurs year round and such costs were not included in this study. However, most of these activities would not involve strict planning. The co-chair of the EMC during most of the study period was the author of the study, and therefore, did not participate. The author estimates an additional $30,000 of salary costs that could have been added to the total if included in the report. Further costs, such as benefits of up to 28% per employee were not included in the study. Indirect costs such as loss of References 1. Lewis P, Aghababian RV: Disaster planning part I: Overview of hospital and emergency department planning for internal and external disasters. Emerg Med Clin North Am 1996;14(2):439–452. 2. Auf der Heide E: Disaster planning PART II: Disaster problems, issues, and challenges identified in the research literature. Emerg Med Clin North Am 1996;14(2):453–480. 3. Toner E, Waldhorn R: What hospitals should do to prepare for an influenza pandemic. Biosecur Bioterror 2006;4(4):397–402. 4. Dabelstein N: Evaluating the international humanitarian system: rationale, process and management of the joint evaluation of the international response to the Rwanda genocide. Disasters 1996;20(4):286–294. 5. Jorgensen CJ: The OR and disaster. Hospitals 1969;43(24):102–105. 6. Brown JH, Schoenfeld LS, Allan PW: The costs of an institutional review board. J Med Edu 1979;54(4):294–299. September – October 2009 physician relative value units, productivity, malpractice, travel costs, communication, and office costs also were not included. Future research should focus on prospective salary costs of emergency preparedness efforts at an institution. As the level of preparedness and involvement within preparedness efforts may differ with hospital characteristics, a multicenter research study may more accurately approximate costs. These costs also should not only be measured in direct salary costs alone, but should include indirect costs such as office support, costs of all drill/exercise participants, and system-wide training, exercising, and planning costs. Conclusions Hospitals are committed to strong emergency management programs due to the risks to which they are exposed. These risks are measured by the impact of any given hazard on the facility within its geographic locations including: proximity to hazards, such as industrial and transportation centers, and potential exposure to disasters of both natural and human-made causes, both internal and external. In the participating institution’s staff, salary cost of such a commitment as demonstrated in this study totaled almost a quarter of a million dollars. In light of such large sums of money, the healthcare industry should strive to streamline emergency preparedness efforts by providing strong hospital leadership support. By standardizing plans, developing local and regional disaster protocols, integrated responses within the community, and effective resource management across competing hospital systems, hospitals would benefit from synergy in their disaster preparation and responses. Individual hospitals might be served better by establishing one individual or a small group of individuals who develop the NIMS compliant community, integrated, all-hazards EOP and maintain it. It also would be this small group’s or individual’s responsibility to train all employees on their roles within the plan as well as meeting with departmental leadership to ensure plan accuracy. 7. Wagner TH, Bhandari A, Chadwick GL, Nelson DK: The cost of operating Institutional Review Boards. Acad Med 2003;78(6):638–644. 8. Sugarman J, Getz K, Speckman JL, Byrne MM, Gerson J, Emanuel EJ: The cost of Institutional Review Boards in academic medical centers. N Engl J Med 2005;352(17)1825–1827. 9. Speckman JL, Byrne MM, Gerson J, Getz K, Wangsmo G, Muse CT, Sugarman J: Determining the costs of Institutional Review Boards. IRB 2007;29(2):7–13. 10. Greater New York Hospital Association: Hospital Expenditures for Emergency Preparedness. February 2003. 11. NIMS Implementation Activities for Hospitals and Healthcare System. Available at http://www.fema.gov/pdf/emergency/nims/imp_hos_fs.pdf. Accesed September 2006. 12. De Lorenzo RA: Financing hospital disaster preparedness. Prehosp Disaster Med 2007;22(5):436–439. 13. Kaji AH, Koenig KL, Lewis RJ: Current hospital disaster preparedness. JAMA 2007;298(18):2188–2190. http://pdm.medicine.wisc.edu Prehospital and Disaster Medicine
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Hospital Emergency & Municipal Emergency Management Questions Response

Hospital Emergency & Municipal Emergency Management Questions Response

Add to these posts with 150 word each. Reference your work in APA format

Post One:

Healthcare is becoming an essential aspect of emergency preparedness and its response efficiency. It is obvious that emergency preparedness in the healthcare framework can no longer be neglected. It is a vital element of emergency response as resources are where they need to be in the situation of an emergency. The culture helps in distributing the obligations and the responsibility between the different players. It also secures the resources to be used in different places. However, healthcare organizations should consider integrating some ways to enhance the efficiency of emergency preparedness response level and for example, involving the community. Involving the community in the disaster preparedness such as; stakeholders will maintain its effective contribution for better response in case of disaster. Also, continuous training for employees in the healthcare organization for disaster preparedness is another way; training is a very essential component of any emergency plan. It helps organizations to asses the severity of the threats and put multiple strategies and tactics to face all type of disasters. And constant vulnerability analysis to asses and plan for all kinds of potential emergencies that might disturb the continuity of the healthcare organization. In addition to that, sharing resources and information between different organizations, coordinate communications and have annual exercises would be a great asset in planning and responding effictvliy to all type of hazards.

References :

Toner, E. S., Ravi, S., Adalja, A., Waldhorn, R. E., McGinty, M., & Schoch-Spana, M. (2015). Doing good by playing well with others: exploring local collaboration for emergency preparedness and response. Health security, 13(4), 281-289.

Post Two:

Regulatory agencies such as the Joint Commission and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services give priority for communication and coordination in their standards. Accordingly, hospitals ought to enhance communication and utilize in preparedness for emergencies. As emergency preparedness is a general obligation and all staff anticipated to take part in this process. Emergency managers should educate the employees by surrounding hazards and recruit them in all emergency phases. For instance, hospitals might arrange meetings for departments chiefs to discuss and explain diverse roles during the staff should conduct in response to a particular emergency. After that, conducting drills and evaluate the competencies.

Another example that most hospitals utilize is posters and billboards as well as screens in waiting rooms, yet still can be utilized in a better way to show targeting public messages and integral strategies to raise awareness. Emergency managers also have to attend a local emergency committee and take part in local drills and familiarize themselves with any new local hazards. Sometimes civilization can bring up industrial revolution which can provoke serious dangers. Therefore, hospitals are required to revise their plan and review local hazards periodically. Speaking out on these issues and sharing knowledge with other members of the committee will help in greater awareness which in turn lead to further comprehensive mandates. Doing so will bring about an up-to-date emergency plan that can handle all hazards. Finally, it is imperative for hospitals to establish a coalition to share experiences and efforts as well as boosting workforce competitiveness.

Worden, Cory, MS, CSHM, CSP, CHSP,A.R.M., R.E.M.,. (2015). ONE CAUSE, ONE CULTURE. Ishn, 49(9), 65-67.

Post Three:

Where do you see hospital emergency management being in 10 years?

A decade is not necessarily a long period to make significant changes in the Hospital Emergency Management discipline. However, only God knows what factors would make an evolutionary alteration in the future. It might be the Artificial Design, with more robots involved in the healthcare system, that would bring the attention more to cybersecurity as a first line to prevent a potential health disaster. The antibiotic resistance is another challenge to the disaster medicine field, and it is becoming worse as the days go on, which may suggest more preparedness plans will be relevant to pathogens more than any other potential hazards. Consequently, the role of the Emergency Manager in the hospital will probably be more than his role nowadays, and his responsibilities may be more complicated than now. As a guess, there will be an Emergency Manager in almost any health care organization in the future.

Will healthcare emergency management be folded into municipal emergency management or into another hospital responsibility? If so, why?

I predict that healthcare emergency management will be another hospital responsibility. Healthcare-related professions became more specialized nowadays compared to the past, and the position of Emergency Manager is not an exception. The responsibilities of an emergency manager had refined the meaning of the ‘Safety ‘ when the principle was disputed by the Facility Safety, Patient Safety, and Quality professionals, giving an integration of the entire process of emergency preparedness.

Besides, merging the healthcare emergency management into municipal will slow the process of hospital response due to the bureaucracy of the municipal, and because the process of assessing hospital risks is a continuous process and require close, and internal inspection and supervision in daily, weekly, and monthly basis.

Post Four:

Where do you see hospital emergency management being in 10 years?

Providing advanced health care management during disasters is one of the highest priorities for the governments to protect their population and to guarantee better health situation. As a result of that, Health care emergency management will continue to grow because of advanced technology, research, and treatment in today life. Providing high-level of health care management during disasters is one of the highest priorities for the governments to protect their population and to guarantee better health situation. For example, after the terrorist attacks on 9/11, the Joint Commission response was in the shape of significant changes to their preparedness standards such as increasing preparedness efforts to encompass the disaster cycle which are mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery. Moreover, federal government support was raised to be more than $1 billion for more than 3,000 local public health systems. Those supports did not only prepared healthcare emergency response systems against human-made disasters, but it also made the emergency management more able to respond when disasters strike and enhanced the surveillance and the inner system connections between public health, clinical medicine, and the other healthcare emergency response systems. Health care organizations now want to be proactive rather than reactive, so they have plans and resources set aside for these eventualities.

Will healthcare emergency management be folded into municipal emergency management or into another hospital responsibility? If so, why?

In my opinion, I think yes. There are many issues that could be solved when healthcare emergency management be folded into municipal emergency management or another hospital responsibility. For example, many hospitals are not well-prepared because they are suffering from the lack of unity of command in hospitals, high-cost implementation for preparation, lack of competitive atmosphere for progress and excellence and planning among hospitals, absence of a common management language, constant change in regulations, and low compatibility and lack of communication/coordination between hospitals in the different regions. Moreover, during the response to a disaster, there are too many decision maker authorities, lack of authorities’ support, lack of qualified managers in different levels, and poor communication and coordination in crisis team.

On the other hand, the finances play a significant role in the development of healthcare emergency management field even though the funding efforts typically do not include the actual planning process, but they focus primarily on resourcing and hospital infrastructure. The preparedness cost of the disaster cycle which are mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery will be decreased when healthcare emergency management become folded into municipal emergency management or another hospital responsibility. The lower cost of preparations will enhance healthcare emergency management since the financial management of health care organizations could boost or decrease the preparedness efforts against disasters.

Barbera, J. A., Yeatts, D. J., & Macintyre, A. G. (2009). Challenge of hospital emergency preparedness: analysis and recommendations. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness3(S1), S74-S82.

Petinaux, B. (2008). Financial Burden of Emergency Preparedness on an Urban, Academic Hospital.Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 24 (5) 372-375

Reilly, M. J., & Markenson, D. S. (2010). Health care emergency management: Principles and practice. Jones & Bartlett Publishers.

Ronald Simon, S.

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T. (November, 6, 2001). The World Trade Center Attack: Lessons for disaster management. National Center for Biotechnology Information.

Sauer, L. M., McCarthy, M. L., Knebel, A., & Brewster, P. (2009). Major influences on hospital emergency management and disaster preparedness. Disaster medicine and public health preparedness3(S1), S68-S73.

Yarmohammadian, M. H., Atighechian, G., Shams, L., & Haghshenas, A. (2011). Are hospitals ready to response to disasters? Challenges, opportunities and strategies of Hospital Emergency Incident Command System (HEICS). Journal of research in medical sciences: the official journal of Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, 16(8), 1070.

Operations Planning for A Group Medical Practice Paper

Operations Planning for A Group Medical Practice Paper

Imagine that a group of physicians who are planning to open a single-specialty group practice has hired you as a consultant. Your job is to advise the physicians in creating a business plan that includes management strategies that will help ensure their success. The physicians have stipulated that the plan must promote medical excellence and limit their exposure to risks associated with the practice of medicine and the operational functions of the practice. In addition, they are aware that a public health emergency or natural disaster could have had a significant impact on their practice, and want to include a strategy for emergency preparedness as part of their plan so that they will be able to manage their patients and help serve the community as needed.

Write a four to six (4-6) page paper in which you:

  1. Compare and contrast the two (2) main levels (i.e., internal comparison and external comparison) of financial benchmarking. Next, analyze the strategic purpose of each level of benchmarking and specify the overall importance of benchmarking as a financial planning tool for a medical practice.
  2. Recommend a Health Information Technology (HIT) system that includes an Electronic Health Record (EHR) for the new practice to implement. Support your recommendation by determining three (3) main benefits of having this type of system for the practice.
  3. According to the text (page 368), some of the main areas of risk exposure for a group practice include: property (general liability and safety), technology, and financial practices. Determine one (1) specific hazard associated with one (1) of these risk categories and propose a strategy to mitigate the impact this risk could have on the practice. Support your analysis with a real-life example.
  4. Determine the main functions of the practice that will need to remain operational before, during, and / or after a natural disaster or public health emergency. Next, suggest a strategy that the practice should take to maintain communication with employees and patients, secure patient and financial records, and ensure that resources will available to care for patients during a disaster or emergency. Provide a rationale for your response.
  5. Use at least three (3) quality academic resources. Note: Wikipedia does not qualify as an academic resource.
  6. Format your assignment according to the following formatting requirements:
    1. Typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides.
    2. Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page is not included in the required page length.
    3. Include a reference page. Citations and references must follow APA format. The reference page is not included in the required page length.

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The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:

  • Evaluate the role of physicians as practice administrators and determine the administrative challenges facing today’s practice managers.
  • Examine ways in which health service administrators can help physicians prepare for disasters and facilitate recovery.
  • Apply benchmarking techniques for financial and operational efficiency.
  • Examine the legal and risk management issues affecting today’s physician practices.
  • Use technology and information resources to research issues in physician’s practice management.
  • Write clearly and concisely about physician’s practice management using proper writing mechanics.

SPCollege Healthcare Organisation Management And Administration

SPCollege Healthcare Organisation Management And Administration

This module explored the role of various health care providers and how the role of these providers is changing based on factors such as an aging population and expanded access to health care coverage.

In 250 words or more, and using at least one outside scholarly reference, discuss some of the new ways health care is being provided and the expanded role of allied health care providers in this process. You may want to discuss:

  • New places care is being provided
  • New job duties for traditional health care providers
  • New types of care providers
  • [Answer required] Whether these changes directly impact your current or future job and what experience will you need to have to get your first/next management job.

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For this discussion, you will need to post your initial thread before you will be able to see the posts of other students.


Standard HSA Discussion Instructions

  • To avoid point loss, carefully follow all assignment instructions and the HSA Discussion Rubric (5 points).
  • Review this Discussion Sample to get a better sense of what is expected of your discussion content and participation.
  • Complete your original post before 11:59 p.m. Thursday, EST.
  • Complete at least 2 peer replies before 11:59 p.m. Sunday, EST.
  • Note that responses to instructor comments do not count toward the minimum number of peer replies.
  • Provide properly formatted citations/references for all source material (see HSA Style Guide).

Behaviorism The Genesis Principle Of Leadership In Healthcare Management

Behaviorism The Genesis Principle Of Leadership In Healthcare Management

Two articles and views on Behaviorism

* Read the pages in the text (1-12) in addition to both articles posted in this lesson. The first article is as the title states, an overview of the behavioral perspective. The second article by DeMar gives a very interesting view of behaviorism. It is written in opposition to behaviorism. You will want to become familiar with more research and materials that both support and also are skeptical of this approach. This will help you form a very well-rounded view of this subject. Also, watch the Big Bang Theory video clip on Behavior Modification.

* After reading the assigned chapter readings, both articles, and viewing the video clip, compile a response/reaction to DeMar’s view of behaviorism.

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QUESTIONS:

1)At this point in your education, do you agree or disagree with DeMar?

2)What are your thoughts and reactions to this statement?…

“…the ethical consequences of behaviorism are great. Man is stripped of his responsibility, freedom, and dignity, and is reduced to a purely biological being, to be “shaped” by those who are able to use the tools of behaviorism effectively.”

* Summarize your response, be sure to address both questions and post it in the discussion board. It is a good idea to copy the questions and paste them to your discussion post, so that we are all aware of what you are answering.

HSA3104 St Petersburg Evolution on Hypertension Management Paper

HSA3104 St Petersburg Evolution on Hypertension Management Paper

As the resources in this module illustrated, health care has changed significantly over the years. For this writing assignment, identify a health issue that has meaning to you, a family member, or friend. Look up the Healthy People 2020 objectives for that health issue. Then consider how that health issue would have been treated differently over the past 150 years (not any older than 1850). Following the HSA Standards provided below and without writing in first person (i.e., I, me, my, us, we, our, etc.), write a paper between 600-800 words in length using the following outline/paragraphs, and including at least three scholarly references:

  • Introduction and description of health issue, including listing the specific Healthy People 2020 indicator(s) and current information about the rates/percentages as compared to the goal
  • Illness treatment/management prior to 1900
  • Illness treatment/management around 1950
  • Illness treatment/management today
  • Summary

Submit the assignment before midnight on Sunday. Name the file: HSA3104_TL_Yourname.docx


Standard HSA Dropbox Instructions

  • Before submitting your assignment to the Dropbox, please review the following:
    • HSA Student Assignment Checklist
    • HSA Style Guide
  • Open the HSA Assignment Grading Rubric (20 points), highlight (CTRL+A), and then copy (CTRL+C) the rubric, and then paste (CTRL+V) the rubric (as text, not an image) at the very end of your paper. I will use this rubric to assess your work and provide you feedback.

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  • In your paper, information should be paraphrased and cited. However, do not use quotes in this course.
  • After you have submitted your assignment, I recommend you review your TurnItIn/Originality report. Review the Reviewing a TurnItIn/Originality Report tutorial to learn more about how this report can help you improve your writing. Your report will identify many technical writing issues. Based on the results, you may revise and resubmit your assignment. I will grade the last version you submit before the deadline.

 

Tags: health issue healthcare management high blood pressure Hypertension Management

Role of Communities in Health Promotion and Perspective of Health Discussion

Role of Communities in Health Promotion and Perspective of Health Discussion

This module started with the history of health care, and brought the discussion to today’s broader perspective of health that includes current national priorities and the role of communities in health promotion.

For this discussion, I would like you to apply some of these concepts by looking at your specific community. In 250 words or more, describe at least one partnership taking place that is supporting health promotion activities for one or more health issue in the community. Cite at least one scholarly source, and consider the following:

  • How are these activities expected to improve community health outcomes?

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  • What else could be done to further support these efforts?
  • Who else needs to get involved?
  • How could it be funded?

 

Tags: health issue History of Health Care perspective of health