Hurricane preparedness week: Get ready now
Hospital Safety Insider, May 14, 2020
Want to receive articles like this one in your inbox? Subscribe to Hospital Safety Insider!
By A.J. Plunkett
It’s Hurricane Preparedness Week in the United States. Dig out your hurricane preparedness plans and review them now with an eye on potentially handling two or more disasters at once. On top of the continuing national emergency related to the surge in COVID-19 patients, a major storms season is upon us.
Hurricane season begins May 15 in the east Pacific Ocean and June 1 in the Atlantic and central Pacific areas. The NOAA’s National Hurricane Center (NHC) is highlighting preparedness May 3-9, and already noted some brief activity in the central Pacific.
While hurricanes are best known for their size and ferocity of wind, the NHC offers the reminder that storm surge and tides, rainfall and flooding and tornadoes are also major problems — and hazards that hospitals are like to have to deal with as storms move onto land.
Prepare now for the patient surge that might happen in a storm, on top of critical patients already being cared for because of the coronavirus pandemic.
And remember that the initial storm may not be your greatest challenge if flooding occurs.
HHS’ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response Technical Resources, Assistance Center, and Information Exchange (ASPR-TRACIE) offers a variety of tools for planning for and reviewing hurricane preparedness. That includes lessons learned at hospital systems during hurricanes Katrina, Sandy and more.
The CDC also offers guidance for hurricane preparedness for healthcare professionals and facilities.
For more on staying prepared for hurricanes and other emergencies, see future issues of Inside Accreditation and Quality.
Want to receive articles like this one in your inbox? Subscribe to Hospital Safety Insider!
Related Products
Most Popular
- Articles
-
- Don't forget the three checks in medication administration
- CDC alert: Screen for international travel as Ebola cases increase
- Note similarities and differences between HCPCS, CPT® codes
- Q&A: Primary, principal, and secondary diagnoses
- Complications from immobility by body system
- Differentiate between types of wound debridement
- OB services: Coding inside and outside of the package
- Nursing responsibilities for managing pain
- Practice the six rights of medication administration
- The consequences of an incomplete medical record
- E-mailed
-
- CDC alert: Screen for international travel as Ebola cases increase
- Capturing start and stop times for infusions
- Differentiate between types of wound debridement
- Q&A: A second look at encephalopathy as integral to seizures/CVA
- Performing a SWOT analysis
- Life Safety Code Q&A: Ambulatory care soiled utility room
- Leadership training for charge nurses
- Helping Charge Nurses understand their leadership role (Part 2 of 3)
- Five ways to safeguard your patients' valuables
- Developing a Fall-Prevention Program
- Searched