Mass Casualty Incident Management: Part 10
There are many ways you can keep yourself and others educated and trained in mass casualty incident management
While mass casualty incidents occur without warning, appropriate planning, preparation and practice help to minimize the impact of such events and maximize provider safety and patient outcome.
In this installment we focus on ways you can keep yourself and others educated and trained in mass casualty incident management.
Publications
Reading publications like EMS World Magazine is one of the best ways to stay current on new technology, best practices and ideas in prehospital medicine from around the world. Articles, including this series, are intended not just to inform the reader of the “new and improved,” but also to remind them about information they knew, but perhaps haven’t used in some time. Most important, these publications provide the reader with ideas as to how they can take this information and integrate best practices within their own service, serve their own community and share this information with fellow providers.
Conferences
Reading about ideas is a start, but sharing and talking about these ideas face-to-face is even better. Conference presentations provide the opportunity to learn directly from industry and subject matter experts, to ask questions and to share your thoughts with other providers. Local, regional and national conferences, such as the upcoming EMS World Expo, provide unique opportunities to collaborate with peers and experts from around the world to help improve the service that you provide to your constituents.
Table-Top Exercises
When you’re ready to put your preparation and plans into practice the best way to start is a table-top exercise. Table-tops are a great way to give participants a birds-eye view of how MCI plans translate into real-world operations.
These exercises can be as simple as sitting down with MCI stake-holders and verbally “walking-through” the phases of a mass casualty incident making note of key positions (Incident Commander, EMS Officer or EMS Branch Director, Triage, Treatment, Transport and Staging), as well as establishing lines of communication and forward movement of patients. Table-top exercises can also work as scaled-down simulations of past or predicted events and include index cards, scale models or other place-holders representing victims, staff, vehicles, resources and any other influencing factor you can think of. However you use them, a table-top exercise is a great way to give MCI plans (and the people expected to implement them) a run-through to elicit questions, identify issues, shake-out bugs and make necessary changes before a real-life incident occurs.
Task Training
As we’ve learned in this series, there’s no such thing as a one-person or even one-agency MCI operation. Mass casualty incidents demand cooperation and collaboration by multiple services. Collaboration with other municipalities, agencies and services in the planning process and even table-top exercises is a beginning, but for an MCI operation to be functional, everyone who will have to work together during the MCI must work together before.
This could be as simple as having firefighters run through decontamination or practice evidence preservation procedures with police officers, or establishing “Triage Tuesdays” where one Tuesday a month EMS crews run through utilizing their services’ triage systems and tags in order to better familiarize themselves (and hospital staff) with the equipment and procedures.
Full-Scale Exercises
Of course, one of the best ways to prepare for an MCI is to participate in a full-scale MCI simulation, but the commitment of time and resources that a well-executed simulation requires can be expensive and time-consuming. The Department of Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP) offers resources to guide you through getting the most out of local, regional, statewide and even international exercises. The purpose of HSEEP is to provide responders with resources and standards for exercise design, development, conduct and evaluation.
National Fire Academy
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