Best practices for active shooter response and prevention in hospitals
Healthcare Life Safety Compliance, December 1, 2017
This is an excerpt from a member only article. To read the article in its entirety, please login or subscribe to Healthcare Life Safety Compliance.
Editor’s note: This Q&A was taken from the January ASHE webinar, “Active Shooter - Best Practices for the Worst Case,” with speakers Kevin M. Tuohey, executive director for research compliance at Boston University & Boston Medical Center; Constance Packard, CHPA, executive director, support services for Boston Medical Center/Boston University Medical Campus; and Thomas Smith, CHPA, CPP, owner of Healthcare Security Consultants, Inc. Here they discuss the unique risks in healthcare facilities, emergency rooms, mental health services, and other treatment facilities, and they address preparedness through operations and design.
Q: Can you tell me how an active shooter incident at a hospital can affect the staff who work there?
Constance Packard: A son came into an institution [Brigham and Women’s Hospital] months after his mother had died and went looking for the cardiologist. He shot that cardiologist and then shot himself. I can tell you a year and a half later that there’s people at that hospital that are still traumatized today. They still talk about it today: the safety, the security, the concerns, and were they ready? These things happen so unprovoked and are unpredictable, but they can happen.
Q: What is the best way to start planning for violent incidents such as active shooters in a hospital?
CP: We go through assessing risk many times and so we're prepared for many things, although it doesn't always go right. If you don't educate and train and communicate to your staff to see how prepared they are, then you could have the worst-case scenario. Doing risk assessments is time-consuming; they're required, but they don't have to be done annually. They could be done more often.
This past winter in Boston, where we used to take our homeless people was to a shelter over a bridge called Long Island. Well, the bridge failed, and we had nowhere to put 1,200 homeless men and women each and every day. They ended up near my neighborhood at Boston Medical Center, so going back and reviewing that risk assessment was important. What did those risks bring to the hospital quality of life, dealing with the homeless population and making sure we could give care? We had to have another risk assessment done for that type of change in our environment.
This is an excerpt from a member only article. To read the article in its entirety, please login or subscribe to Healthcare Life Safety Compliance.
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