Safety

Tune in to your hospital's alternative communications

Emergency Management Alert, May 24, 2004

Because communication is usually one of the first resources to fail during a disaster, build a series of communication redundancies to help continue operations.

For example, New York City hospitals spent years working on backup communications in preparation for Y2K. "We bought 800 MHz radios so members could use the city's radio system," says Doris Valise, associate general counsel of the Greater New York Hospital Association (GNYHA). "Then, the city's office of emergency management (OEM) created a separate healthcare channel for GNYHA so we could communicate with them."

To learn more about the alternative communications to have in place, visit http://www.hcpro.com/ppv.cfm?content_id=39363

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