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Journal Article

Citation

Lin A, Taylor K, Cohen RS. Disaster Med. Public Health Prep. 2018; 12(6): 692-696.

Affiliation

Division of Neonatology,Stanford University, Neonatology,Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health, Publisher Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/dmp.2017.139

PMID

29382399

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To develop a disaster triage tool for the evacuation of hospitalized neonatal and pediatric populations.

METHODS: We expanded an existing neonatal disaster triage tool for the evacuation of a children's hospital. We assessed inpatients using bedside visual assessments and chart review to categorize patients transport level based on local emergency medical services protocols and expert opinion. The tool was refined by using multiple Plan Do Study Act cycles. Primary outcome was the number of each level of transport required for hospital evacuation. Secondary outcome was improved efficiency of obtaining information about specific transport needs for evacuation.

RESULTS: We evaluated 1382 patients both visually and through electronic chart review over 10 random days. Accordance between visual assessment and electronic chart review reached 96.3%. During a 2 hour statewide disaster drill, no hospital units completed self-assessed transport needs for their patients; a single nurse used Triage by Resource Allocation in INpatients to determine transportation needs in less than 1 hour. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2018;page 1 of 5).


Language: en

Keywords

disaster planning; hospital evacuation; pediatric; surge capacity; triage

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