77
Canterbury Primary Response Earthquakes Sept/Feb/June Dr Phil Schroeder Primary Care Coordinator Canterbury Primary Response Group Kelly Robertson Nurse Leader Canterbury Primary Response Group

Canterbury Primary Response Earthquakes Sept/Feb/June Dr Phil Schroeder Primary Care Coordinator Canterbury Primary Response Group Kelly Robertson Nurse

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Canterbury Primary ResponseEarthquakes Sept/Feb/June

Dr Phil SchroederPrimary Care Coordinator

Canterbury Primary Response Group

Kelly RobertsonNurse Leader

Canterbury Primary Response Group

Pre-historic Lessons

Managing It

Emergency Planning: Whole of Health Response

CDHB Operations Team

Primary Care: Canterbury

Primary Response Group

Community and Public Health Secondary Care St John

Canterbury Primary Response Group

Agencies and Funders

• Ministry of Health• Canterbury District Health Board• Hospital & Secondary Care • Community and Public Health • St John• City Council & Civil Defence• Aid Agencies e.g. Red Cross• Mental Health NGOs• Private Hospitals • Hotels• Media & Communications

Primary

• Primary Health Organisations• General Practice• 24HS & After Hours Clinics• Pharmacy• District Nursing + Home Care • Plunket• Maori Community Health• Allied Health Workers• Rest Homes• Radiology & Laboratories

Canterbury: the safest of havens.

Canterbury and NZ 2010 and NZ 2009

Rates Of Influenza-like Illness In Canterbury And New Zealand to 30 September 2010

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

7/01

/201

0

7/02

/201

0

7/03

/201

0

7/04

/201

0

7/05

/201

0

7/06

/201

0

7/07

/201

0

7/08

/201

0

7/09

/201

0

7/10

/201

0

7/11

/201

0

7/12

/201

0

Rat

e pe

r 10

0,00

0 pr

actic

e po

pula

tion Canterbury

NZ 2009

NZ 2010high

moderate to low

September 4th 2010: Magnitude 7.1

• Mass casualties/injuries but no fatalities.

• Building damage Selwyn, Kaiapoi, ChCh and CBD.

• Liquefaction Kaiapoi and ChCh.

• Power out for up to one week.

• Water, Sewage out for several days – months.

Hope for the Best

Plan for the Worst

Lessons September 4th 2010 “7.1” Selwyn Quake

LUCKY?

Emergency Planning

Risk Reduction

Readiness

Response

Recovery Relationships

Emergency Planning: Mandate Given 17th February

Health Emergency

Influenza Pandemic

Infectious Outbreak eg. SARS

Non Health Emergency Earthquake Flood or

TsunamiRugby

World Cup

Health Non-Emergency

Measles Outbreak

Noro-virus Community

Outbreak

12:51 22ND FEBRUARY 2011

February 22nd 2011: Magnitude 6.3

• Vertical acceleration quake among highest ever recorded.

• Mass casualties with 181 fatalities.

• Building damage ChCh and in particular CBD with monumental collapse.

• Liquefaction ChCh.

• Power out for up to two months plus.

• Water, Sewage out for months.

Pegasus Health 24Hr Surgery– Staff safety– Patient safety– Building safety– Continuity of services

The Response Phase - Immediate

General Practice– Staff safety– Patient safety– Building safety– Continuity/cessation

of services

The Response Phase - Immediate cont:

Incident Centre coordination

Assessment of GPs and Pharmacy’s ability to provide service

Support for affected services

Staff and practice welfare

The Coordinated Primary Care Response

Response StatusLevel 1 Level 2 Level 3

Score = 4 Score = 2 Score = 0

Building (the building they are working from (rather than their normal place of business

Moderate structural damage to premises, e.g. yellow sticker, co-located with another business or significantly comprised workflow

Minor structural damage to premise that have some impact of workflow

No structural damage – may have cosmetic damage that does not materially impact on business delivery

Services (water, sewer, power, telephone or fax)

One or more services not available for more than 1 business day in the last week

One or more service not available for any part of a business day in the last week

All services available with no interruption to any services in the last week

Staff (both in their employed roles and personal situation

One of more members of the business team significantly impacted by quake (physical injury, loss of family member or friend, displaced form home, significant financial hardship). Staff redundancies likely or made

One of more members of the business team are coping with moderate impact by the quake (significant damage to home, partner redundancy, difficulty maintaining staffing levels, etc)

Members of the business team have been impacted in a limited way by the quake

Income (rest home closure, medical practice relocated, retail sales, reduce consult/script numbers (depopulation)

One or more income streams significantly impacted by the quake (e.g. greater than 20% reduction in income)

One or more income streams moderately impacted by the quake (e.g. 5% to 19% reduction in income)

Income streams impacted in a limited way by the quake (less than 5%)

Practice and Pharmacy Status Definition

Total score across the 4 categories:

Status Score

Green 0 - 1

Amber 2 - 9

Red 10 or more

Practice and Pharmacy Status

Affect on Staff– Personally affected but

continued to work– Affected services

struggling with limited resources

• The clean up• Lack of essential services• Safety of vaccines

Providing Care

– Decreased ability to perform at peak – “earthquake brain”

– Increased risk of misdiagnosis– Coping with own stress with aftershocks in the

work environment – Loss of business due to patients relocating

Providing Care cont…

Affect on Patients– Access to service– Less people presenting but longer consultations

required– Health not priority due to disruption of homes and

livelihood– Relocating – loss of continuity of care

Providing Care cont…

Ongoing………..– Funding options to support patient care– HR support/Pastoral care– Counseling support for staff– Regular communication to General Practice and

Pharmacies– Buddy system– Locum relief

Staff Support

• Co-location

• Relocation

• Insurance Limitations

Issues for Pharmacy - Business Continuity

Issues for Pharmacy - Business Continuity

Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 30

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Pharmacies Scripts % comparison 3 weeks post-Quake Green Zone Status

Green 1Green 2Green 3Green 4Green 5Green 6

Issues for Pharmacy - Business Continuity

Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 30

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Pharmacies Scripts % comparison 3 weeks post-Quake Rural

Rural 1Rural 2Rural 3Rural 4Rural 5Rural 6Rural 7

Issues for Pharmacy - Business Continuity

Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 3-100

-80

-60

-40

-20

0

20

Pharmacies Scripts % comparison 3 weeks post-Quake Red Zone Status

Red 1Red 2Red 3Red 4Red 5Red 6

Issues for Pharmacy - Business Continuity

Critical Issues February 2011

General Practice

Comms Building

Pharmacy Comms Building

Day One

District Nursing Building

Primary Coord

Comms Building

Power Computers

Power Stock

Day Three

Cordon Access

Comms Building

Portaloos

Portaloos Stock

Day Six

Cordon Access

Comms

Critical Issues February 2011

General Practice

Comms Building

Pharmacy Comms Building

Day One

District Nursing Building

Primary Coord

Comms Building

Power Computers

Power Stock

Day Three

Cordon Access

Comms Building

Portaloos

Portaloos Stock

Day Six

Cordon Access

Comms

Portaloos

Portaloos

Day Ten

Fuel Staffing

Roles

Critical Issues February 2011

Rural CanterburyDay Three

Situation: Survey 100%

Open.

Problems: 1) Rising numbers displaced

patients and consult rates.

2) Fuel needing

farming coop.3) Resupply medication and courier

issues.

Rural Canterbury

Day One

Situation: Some Minor

Building Damage. NO Loss Power,

Water, Sewage

Action: Practice

Survey 100% Rural

Practices Open.

Rural Canterbury

Day Six

Situation: Survey 100%

Open.

Problems: 1) Huge

numbers displaced

patients and unprecedented consult rates.

Rural Canterbury

Day Ten

Situation: Survey 100%

Open.

Problems: 1) Ongoing

huge numbers displaced

patients and ongoing high consult rates.

Earthquake Response February 2011

General Practice 33%

Pharmacy 21%

Day One

79%

80%

Day Three

85%

83%

Day Six

96%

94%

Day Ten

Earthquake Response February 2011

Red Practices:

Major Issues

Amber Practices:

Serious Issues

Green Practices:Minor or no issues

7%

34%

59%

Day 15:

103 Open = 96%

1 Relocating

2 Closed

Earthquake Response February 2011

3%

31%

66%

Week 8:

105 Open = 99%

8 Relocated

1 Closed

7%

34%

59%

Day 15 Week 8

Earthquake Response February 2011

17%

34%

49%

Week 83%

31%

66%

General Practice Pharmacy

Canterbury Quakes: Sept, Feb, June

June 13th 2011: Magnitude 5.7 & 6.3

• Some casualties but no fatalities.

• Building damage ChCh & CBD again.

• Liquefaction ChCh.

• Power out for one week plus.

• Water, Sewage out again.

The Gap

What Lessons Are We Learning?

Lesson One:

Overall Coordination

Emergency Response

• CIMS – Coordinated Incident Management System

• EOC – Emergency Operations Centre

Emergency Planning: Whole of Health Response

CDHB Operations Team

Primary Care: Canterbury

Primary Response Group

Community and Public Health Secondary Care St John

Primary Emergency Operations Centre (EOC)

Primary Care Coordinator(s)

CommunicationsPrimary Care Reps :Rural Health Pharmacy

District Nursing EOC Manager

Logistics IntelligenceSector Coordinators Support Human

Resources Finance

Lesson Two:

Emergency Timelines

Earthquake Response February 2011Preparing for Further Emergency

First 24 Hours• Institute local response• Contact EOC and provide status

Week One• Centralize Response and deploy resources to greatest

need• Survey Practices/Pharmacies to provide logistic support

Week Two Plus• Recognize areas most needing ongoing intensive input• Design ongoing work-streams or projects

Month Three Plus• Recovery mode: business viability, service viability.

Earthquake Response February 2011

General Practice & Pharmacy

Eastern Suburbs Project

Gastroenteritis Project

Vaccination Project

Practice and Pharmacy Relocation

Project

Practice and Pharmacy Viability Project

Practice and Pharmacy

Development Project

Human Resource Project

Future Planning

Mental Health and Psycho-

social Response

Preparing for Further

Emergency

Emergency Planning

Response

RecoveryReadiness

Lesson Three:

Local Cooperation

Notes:

City Ward Boundaries(Also used by CDEM)

An Example. . . . . .

City Ward

Sectors, Legs and Coordinators

Primary EOC

LEGLEG

LEG

LEG

LEG

City Ward

LEG

Sector Coordinator

Primary EOC

Emergency Planning: Whole of Health Response

Rural Canterbury: 5

Districts

Christchurch: 6 Sectors

After Hours Clinics

Hospitals & Secondary

Care

Lesson Four:

Business Continuity

Business Continuity

Emergency Planning

May 2011 Survey Findings

1) Appreciation for DHB supported free consults and prescriptions.

2) Keen for up to date information and consistent communications.

3) Frustration in achieving and maintaining power, water, sewage services and sense of DHB stockpile required eg. Generators.

4) Remarkable ability to continue to provide care when under duress.

5) Universally felt that everyone would like to be better prepared.

Business Continuity Continuity of

Care

Emergency Planning

Lesson Summary:

The Circle of Life and Emergencies

Emergency Planning: Whole of Health Response

(1) Overall

Response

(2) Timeline

Progression

(3) Local

Response

(4) Business

Continuity

(5) Continuity

of Care

Summary: Whole of Health Response

Canterbury Primary Response Website:www.primaryhealthresponse.org.nz

Logon: Primary Password: Response

Contact Email: [email protected]