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Transcript
Providence Alaska Medical Center’s
highly infectious disease planning
journey to designation
Hale Borealis – October 18, 2016
Pat Reynaga, RN

PAMC Director of
Communications and
Emergency
Preparedness
Rebecca Hamel, RN

PAMC Infection
Preventionist



Describe a strategy for evaluating infectious
disease readiness and preparedness.
List three local/national resources for
enhancing their emergency
preparedness/infection prevention programs.
Define the level of Ebola readiness
designation PAMC has achieved.

March 2014 – Emergence of outbreak in West
Africa
◦ projected 20,000 infected people by year end 2014

July 2014 – CDC Health Advisories – rapid
changes
◦ Disease information, Clinical recognition, PPE,
Recommendations

October 2014 Status of Epidemic in West
Africa (Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia)
◦ 9935 cases
◦ 4877 deaths




4 treated after abroad
(Atlanta, Omaha)
1 traveler who developed
symptoms in US (Liberia to
Dallas, Sept 30)
2 nurses acquired the
infection in the US (Dallas,
early Oct)
1 MD acquired infection 10
days after return to US
(Guinea to NYC, Oct 23)




Mr. Duncan, 42, grew up next to a leper colony in Liberia and
fled years of war before later returning to his country to find it
ravaged by the disease that ultimately took his life.
Duncan arrived in Dallas in late September, realizing a long-held
ambition to join relatives. He came to attend the high-school
graduation of his son, who was born in a refugee camp in Ivory
Coast and was brought to the U.S. as a toddler when the boy's
mother successfully applied for resettlement.
The trip was the culmination of decades of effort, friends and
family members said. But when Duncan arrived in Dallas, though
he showed no symptoms, he had already been exposed to Ebola.
His neighbors in Liberia believe Duncan become infected when
he helped a pregnant neighbor who later died from it. It was
unclear if he knew about her diagnosis before traveling.
Duncan had arrived at a friend's Dallas apartment on Sept. 20 -less than a week after helping his sick neighbor.


CDC Support - Dallas Hospital Investigation
Immediate Actions in Response to the
Investigation
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦

Personal Protective Equipment
Oversight and Monitoring
Enhanced Training
Establishing a Dedicated CDC Response Team
Ensuring Healthcare Workers and Facilities are
Prepared
Recommendations



Complete skin coverage
Use of buddy system to
oversee and monitor
donning/doffing of PPE
Training and drills

Summer 2014
◦ CDC Health Advisories

August 2014
◦ Alaska Interagency Outbreak Readiness Team

October 2014
◦ Interdisciplinary meetings and town hall meetings
◦ Providence System – resource documents
◦ Rapid Ebola Preparedness Tool for Hospitals (11
domains)
◦ Determination and acquisition of PPE
◦ Enhanced PPE Training
◦ Regional training and supplies
Inventory
EMS including PAMC
Off-campus
Room
8&9
Incident Command
TRIAGE or PAMC
On-campus

October 20, 2014 – November 14, 2014
◦ 13 training sessions
◦ Over 100 staff trained
◦ Multidisciplinary staff

First full scale drill planned for November 17,
2014
◦ Emergency Department entry point to Intensive Care
Unit
◦ Multiple department involvement
◦ Containment walls, decontamination shower,
supplies, don/doff

Competency
◦ Enhanced PPE and supplies
◦ Observer checklists
◦ PAPR training


Points of entry and workflow
Incident Command support processes
◦ Phone trees
◦ Department readiness
◦ Supplies prepped and ready

Isolation, Containment, Safety
◦ Walls
◦ Decontamination

November 14, 2014
◦ Presented with fever, diarrhea, nausea – not wet
◦ Recent travel from Mali
 Few cases being monitored, not yet declared
◦ Language barrier
◦ Phone trees
◦ ID MD and IP support in-house within 45 minutes
from presentation
◦ Lessons learned
 Processes
 Roles
 Workflow



Strong partnership with State Public Health
Certain roles are critical throughout process
and required on-site
Lab collecting, processing and transport
◦ Rote processes (ordering, collecting)
◦ Staff safety



Phone trees
Training
Next steps
◦ CDC Recommendations

June 2015
◦ Create an environment in which infection prevention
is a component of best practice and strive in daily
practice for infectious disease incident and outbreak
preparedness.
◦ Promote a culture committed to infectious disease
incident and outbreak readiness through proactive
accountability for all staff being effectively trained,
informed and protected at all times.
◦ Develop a comprehensive infectious disease incident
response program that supports ongoing readiness
through training, evaluation and implementation of
best practices.
Facility Infrastructure
 Private room with in-room dedicated
bathroom with covered toilet or covered
bedside commode
 Dedicated patient-care equipment
 Determined transfer routes
Patient Transport
 Patients under investigation vs confirmed to an
Ebola Assessment Hospital or Ebola Treatment
Center
◦ Ground transport
◦ Air transport



Transportation provider(s) safe transport
training
Identification of appropriate PPE
Entry points to designated units
Laboratory Safety and Capacity
 Diagnostic laboratory procedures and
protocols are in place
 Specimen handoff and transport for routine
clinical diagnostic testing at the facility
◦ iSTAT


Lab personnel have been trained and have
demonstrated proficiency in PPE
Specimen transport to designated lab
Staffing of Patient Care Team
 Readiness plans include input from a
multidisciplinary team of all potentially
affected hospital departments
◦ iDIRT

Staffing plans have been developed and
scheduled to support 96 consecutive hours of
clinical care
Training
 All staff involved in or supporting patient care
are appropriately trained for their roles
 All staff involved in or supporting patient care
and according to their roles have demonstrated
proficiency in:
◦
◦
◦
◦

Donning and doffing of PPE
Proper waste management
Infection control practice
Specimen transport: Y N
Retraining is provided as needed and to address
observed gaps
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
 Hospital has selected appropriate PPE for
suspected or confirmed EVD patients
◦ High risk procedures
◦ Symptomatic

Each step of every PPE donning/doffing
procedure is supervised by a trained observer
◦ Buddy System

Hospital has at least a 4–5-day supply of PPE
in stock
Worker Safety
 Worker safety programs and policies
 Hospital is in compliance with all federal or
state occupational safety and health
regulations
 Hospital has a program for assuring direct
active monitoring
◦ monitoring for 21 days since the last known
exposure

Monitoring will be done in coordination with
local and state public health agencies
Environmental Services and Infection Control
 Hospital has a program in place to clean and
disinfect patient care areas and equipment
with Environmental Protection Agencyregistered hospital disinfectant
 Designated staff are:
◦ Trained in correct cleaning and disinfection of the
patient room and equipment
◦ Trained in the correct use of PPE
◦ Directly supervised during all cleaning and
disinfection
Management of Waste
 Hospital has in place the services of a wastemanagement vendor capable of managing
and transporting Category A infectious
substances
OR
 Hospital will sequester medical waste until
the patient’s Ebola test result becomes known
 Hospital has appropriate containers for the
safe temporary storage of Category A
Clinical Management
 Staff who will be involved in managing the
patient know the clinical protocols for
management of PUIs
 Special populations
◦ Pediatric
◦ Obstetric
Operations Coordination
 To ensure coordination of the response and
communication regarding any PUIs for Ebola,
the hospital has:
◦ An emergency management structure
◦ Plans and processes for routinely communicating with
local and state public health agencies, emergency
management authorities, coalitions
◦ Plans and processes for routinely communicating with
hospital employees, patients, and community
leadership
Leadership (LD)
04.01.01
04.01.07
Environment of Care (EC)
02.02.01
03.01.01
Emergency Management (EM)
01.01.01
02.01.01
02.02.01
02.02.03
02.02.05
02.02.07
03.01.01
03.01.03
Human Resources (HR)
01.04.01
01.05.03
01.06.01
03.01.01
Infection Control (IC)
01.03.01
01.05.01
01.06.01
02.01.01
02.02.01
02.03.01
03.01.01
Nursing (NR)
01.01.01
02.03.01
NPSG
07.01.01

Local resources
◦ DHHS Emergency Programs
◦ CDC Quarantine Station

Training – ongoing
◦ Drills
◦ Mini exercises

Tools and Resources
◦ https://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/
◦ http://www.emoryhealthcare.org/ebolaprotocol/ehc-message.html
◦ http://www.nebraskamed.com/biocontainmentunit/ebola