The OMMC Surgery Disaster Preparedness Program was established on May 15, 2003, when the Department
Disaster Preparedness Plan was presented and approved and the Simulated Disaster Drills were done.
The OMMC Surgery Disaster Preparedness Plan was formulated in consideration of the OMMC Disaster Preparedness
Plan. Dr. Leo Orantia, the vice-chair of the OMMC Disaster Preparedness Committee was
present.
The 2003 members of the OMMC Surgery Disaster Preparedness Committee:
Dr. Reynaldo Joson – Department Chair
Dr. Harry Go – Department Assistant Chair for Service
All surgical residents
2003 Department Disaster Control Director – Dr. Alex Deveza
2003 Assistant Department Disaster Control Director – Dr. Red Roque
Goal in disaster management – save as many patients as possible with as little complaints as possible!
2006
The OMMC Surgery Disaster Preparedness Plan is being reviewed every January since 2003. Latest
review was done on January 19, 2006. Dr. Leo Orantia, the vice-chair of the OMMC Disaster Preparedness Committee was
again present in the 2006 review.
The 2006 members of the OMMC Surgery Disaster Preparedness Committee:
Dr. Reynaldo Joson – Department Chair
Dr. Adrian Yu – Department Assistant Chair for Service
All surgical residents
2006 Department Disaster Control Director – Dr. Cecile Leyson
2006 Assistant Department Disaster Control Director – Dr. Rick Mujer
Goal in disaster management – save as many victims and as much properties as possible!
Disaster
Preparedness Program
Memo [May 4, 2003]
Development and Institutionalization of Department Disaster Preparedness Program in OMMC Surgery
Blueprint of OMMC Surgery Disaster Preparedness Program
OMMC Surgery
Disaster Preparedness Plan – 2003 / 2006
Content of 2006 Poster of OMMC Surgery Disaster Preparedness Plan (Overview and Checklist)
Simulated
Disaster Drills
Year |
Date |
Scenarios |
Outcome |
Improvements/ Resolutions |
2006 |
Jan. 19, 06 |
Same as above |
Results of Drills – Output of
Team I
Team II
Team III
Disaster Control Director |
- Use of
ribbons as tags
- Color
tagging rather than color “coding”
- Implement
tagging on sudden influx of patients (do not use black ribbon unless certain of unsalvageable; use 1, 2, 3 in same color to
prioritize; maximum simultaneous major operations is three (3) only.
- Emphasis
on post-disaster evaluation and reporting
|
Philosophy
Conscious
of our responsibility to have a preparedness to meet the needs of the patients and the community in disaster situations, we
are committed to the development of a disaster preparedness plan at the Department of Surgery of Ospital ng
Maynila Medical Center (OMMC Surgery). We endeavor to implement it in a concerted effort of all concerned and
in cooperation with other OMMC departments and external emergency organizations.
Objectives
The primary
objective is to prepare the OMMC Surgery personnel for optimal performance during times of disaster. The aims are to prevent
death and injuries to patients and hospital personnel; to avoid destruction to hospital properties; and to render medical
services to the largest possible number of patients during a disaster.
The secondary
objective is to make the OMMC Surgery personnel aware of the importance of the disaster preparedness plan, how it is executed,
and the benefits it provides.
Scope
of OMMC Surgery Disaster Preparedness Plan
A. General
Disaster Control Flow Chart
B. External
Disaster Preparedness Plan
C. Internal
Disaster Preparedness Plan
D. Response
Teams' Disaster Preparedness Plan
Definition
and Types of Disaster Faced by a Hospital and a Department of Surgery
Disaster is
any event that overwhelms the person or a group of persons facing it. The overwhelming can be in terms of psychosocial impact,
destruction of property, injuries to or diseases of human beings, and scarcity of resources.
Any event
that is of a magnitude that overwhelms the administration of the hospital (or the department) is a disaster in the hospital
(or the department).
Triage
and Color Tagging
Red
– for critical care patients or classified as priority one (Immediate Tx)
Yellow
– for acute care patients or classified as priority two (Delayed)
Green
– for primary care patients or classified as priority three (Minimal)
Black – for non-salvageable patients (Expectant)
Disaster
Response Teams
Depending
on the type and extent of disaster, the following disaster response teams and codes are established as part of a disaster
preparedness plan:
Team I surgical residents and interns
Team II surgical residents and interns
Team III surgical residents and interns
Code Red or Red Alert – all teams are physically present in the hospital
Code
Yellow or Yellow Alert – two teams are physically present in the hospital
Code
Green or Green Alert – all teams are on call
Surgical
consultants are called in as necessary.
Forms
Patients’ Log
Checklists
Checklist on essential steps in disaster control and management
Essential
steps |
Yes |
No |
Remarks |
Declaration
of disaster |
|
|
|
Creation of
an incident command |
|
|
|
Notification
of
Department
Disaster Control Director |
|
|
|
Department
Assistant Chair for Service |
|
|
|
Department
Chair |
|
|
|
Senior
House Officer on duty |
|
|
|
Hospital Director |
|
|
|
Mobilization
and organization (task assignment and authorization) of surgical and parasurgical staff |
|
|
|
Surgical
Team on Duty
Surgical
Team Pre-duty
Surgical Team Post-duty |
|
|
|
Surgery
Consultants
Specific specialty consultants
General surgery consultants |
|
|
|
Parasurgical staff – nurses
Emergency Room
Operating Room
Surgery Ward |
|
|
|
Mobilization
and organization of other medical staff as indicated with task assignment and authorization |
|
|
|
Mobilization
of ancillary services (laboratory, x-ray, pharmacy, etc) |
|
|
|
Control of
disaster
Triage |
|
|
|
Treatment |
|
|
|
Referrals |
|
|
|
Traffic
control |
|
|
|
Patient
log |
|
|
|
Relatives
Information Area |
|
|
|
Press
conference |
|
|
|
Decongestion
and post-disaster reconstruction |
|
|
|
Post-disaster
evaluation and reporting |
|
|
|
Evaluation
of OMMC Surgery Disaster Preparedness Program
|
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
There
is a written department disaster preparedness plan (ddpp). |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
There
is a structured ddpp. |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
The
ddpp is disseminated to all surgical residents and to least the assistant chair for service. |
Mar 15, 03 |
Jan 29, 04 |
Jan 20, 05 |
Jan 19, 06 |
The
ddpp is being used in real disasters or simulated disasters (at least once a year). |
Mar 15, 03 |
Jan 29, 04 |
Jan 20, 05 |
Jan 19, 06 |
The
ddpp is being evaluated at least after each real disaster and updated thereafter (at least once every 2 years). |
Done |
Jan 29, 04 |
Jan 20, 05 |
Jan 19, 06 |
FORMAT in Making a Report on a Disaster
OMMC Earthquake Preparedness Program – initiated by Department of Surgery in 2006