Title: Innovations in Primary Care Emergency Management: Planning, GIS Mapping, and Public Health Response Emergency Management Higher Education Conference June 4, 2009
1Innovations in Primary Care Emergency Management
Planning, GIS Mapping, and Public Health
ResponseEmergency Management Higher Education
ConferenceJune 4, 2009
- Nora OBrien, MPA California Primary Care
Association
2Presentation Overview
- Review of California Community Clinics and Health
Centers (CCHC) and emergency response roles - Current H1N1 Influenza Outbreak and CPCA response
- CPCA Clinic Emergency Preparedness Resources
- Application of Emergency Management Education to
current work - Questions
3CPCA Community Clinic and Health Centers
- 822 community clinics and health centers (CCHCs)
- CPCAs more than 740 members include
- Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs and
FQHC Look-a-likes) - Rural Health Clinics
- Community Clinics
- Free Clinics
- Planned Parenthood Clinics
- 17 Regional Clinic Consortia
4Who CA CCHCs Serve
- Patients
- 4 million patients
- 49 of whom are limited English proficient
- Visits
- 12.5 million patient visits provided
- 1 mil uninsured and 1.4 mil Medi-Cal
- 3.6 million patients under 200 of the FPL
- All information compiled by Jeanita Harris, CPCA
Data Analyst. Numbers are based on 2007 OSHPD
data.
5 CA CCHC Characteristics
- CCHCs serve the most vulnerable
patients-regardless of their ability to pay,
insurance, or immigration status. - Health care safety net for many communities,
counties and regions. - Provide multitude of services to
uninsured/underinsured where hospitals and other
medical providers may not exist.
6Potential CCHC Emergency Response Roles
- Medical surge capacity for hospitals and public
health departments - Triage
- Disease surveillance
- Mental health services
- Alternate Care Sites
- Medical response staging
- Deploy mobile units and CCHC staff
- Ethnic community outreach
- Serve as Points of Distribution (POD) sites
- Translation services
- Shelter residents
- Social Services access
CCHCs can respond effectively to emergencies when
given resources, training, and equipment
7 H1N1 Influenza Outbreak
- Why public health officials are alarmed
- Novel virus- no one has immunity to it
- Likely to kill more healthy adults than young and
old - Cases identified in outpatient settings like
CCHCs - One of earliest 107 confirmed cases was a member
- 1918 pandemic followed similar pattern of mild
cases then deadly outbreaks during fall and
winter - Today we have greater syndromic surveillance
capability, anti-viral meds, and instant
communication
8CPCA H1N1Influenza Outbreak Response
- Situational awareness of local clinic and
regional consortia response needs - Coordinate medical response with local, state,
and national partners - Promote credible medical guidance from state and
federal sources via CPCA website and snapblast - Advocate CCHC interests on state and federal
calls - CCG testified H1N1 Influenza legislative hearing
- Respond to media requests- LA Times, SF Chronicle
9CCHC Emergency Response Efforts
- Hurricane Katrina (2005)
- Deployed mobile medical assets
- Triaged to hospitals
- Provided Rx primary care
- Wildfires (2003, 07, 08)
- Used Clinic practice management systems to ID
patients at risk - Provided mental health services
- Treated First responders and community
- Provided translation services
- Evacuation and shelter assistance
- Deployed mobile medical assets
10Challenges to CCHC Emergency Response
- No consistent patient tracking system
- Limited reimbursement for services rendered
- Not all CCHCs integrated into local response
plans - CCHCs at varying levels of preparedness
- CCHC leadership buy-in for preparedness efforts
11Clinic Emergency Preparedness EffortsMeeting the
Challenges
- No consistent patient tracking system!
- Few CCHCs have Electronic Health Record systems
- Limited reimbursement for services rendered
- CPCA Policy Team involved in tracking,
monitoring, and influencing legislation that can
positively impact reimbursement to clinics. - Not all CCHCs integrated into local response
plans - CAHAN
- CPCA EOP Template
12Clinic Emergency Preparedness EffortsMeeting the
Challenges
- CCHCs at varying levels of preparedness
- Exercise participation
- GIS mapping
- CCHC leadership buy-in for preparedness efforts
- Ongoing meetings/discussions with leadership by
key CPCA team members
13CPCA CCHC Emergency Management Tools and
Resources
- A robust CCHC-specific Emergency Operations Plan
- Clinic Emergency Preparedness Help Desk
- Emergency Flipchart
- Clinic Emergency Preparedness Task Force
- ACS, POD and Mobile Medical Asset GIS Mapping
- CPCA Emergency Preparedness Training Modules
- Clinic ICS/NIMS Training
- Pandemic Influenza Planning Toolkit
- Redundant Communication Training Module
14 ACS, POD Mobile Medical Asset GIS
Tracking
- Why GIS is Important to Emergency Preparedness
- 9/11 Story
- Integral to any comprehensive disaster management
plan - Bottom line This stuff saves lives.
- Identification of Clinic Alternate Care Sites
- ACS Survey Tool
- ACS Outreach
- ACS Data Collection
- GIS Mapping
- Knowing what is in your community so that you can
protect it - A spatial display and analysis tool that can
answer key questions
15 CPCA Regional Outreach
- Increased visits to CPCA Clinics/Increased
interaction with CPCA field operations - Statewide Tabletops and expanded emergency
preparedness exercises - Provision of expanded information, training and
additional resources to CPCA members - Expanded CPCA Help Desk information and FAQs
- Establishment of a CPCA Emergency Preparedness
Quarterly Newsletter - Expanded opportunities for webinars, new training
content, additional live seminars as needed
16 CCHC NIMS Expectations
- Bureau of Primary Health Care (BPHC) Emergency
Management Expectations expect FQHCs and
Look-Alikes to move toward NIMS compliance and
implement ICS in their EMPs- not required - ASPRs Hospital Preparedness Program (HPP)
requires only hospital staff to meet the 14 NIMS
elements - CCHCs likely required to implement some of the
NIMS elements in future HPP guidance
17Clinic Incident Command System NIMS Training
- Modeled after the Hospital Incident Command
System training and tailored to the CCHC setting - Developed with input from 40 CCHC medical and
operational staff - Designed for three CCHC audiences
- Command Module (4 hour)
- ICS H 100, ICS H 200, and 700A CalEMA certified
- Executive Module (1.5 hour)
- General Staff Module (1 hour)
18Clinic ICS/NIMS Training Next Steps
- Final versions of the Command, Executive, and
General staff module will be available on demand
via CPCAs web-based Learning Management System-
June 2009 - CPCA will host a General Staff WebEx training-
June 2009 - CPCA will offer the Executive Module via
videoconference- August 2009
19Emergency Management Education
- Masters of Public Affairs, Disaster and Emergency
Management Program- Park University, KC, MO - Rationality, responsibility, and responsiveness
in their organizations within a framework of the
highest ethical values - Both Online and in-person classes
- Experienced emergency management faculty- IAEM
and IACP past presidents - Undergraduate and certificate DEM programs also
available
20Application of Emergency Management Education to
Current Work
- Provided an academic framework to emergency
management work largely focused on preparedness
rather than response - Firmer knowledge of in-depth emergency management
concepts such as mitigation, business continuity,
disaster resiliency, and vulnerable population
response - Modified work to reflect larger emergency
management context, i.e., public safety, private
sector, government, EMS
21Emergency Management Academic Research Challenges
- Paucity of emergency management research
regarding vulnerable population preparedness and
response - LEP populations, resource poor individuals,
disabled, seniors, children, etc. - Service providers of vulnerable populations need
EM tools and resources to plan but lack
infrastructure to implement - Disconnect between response to public health
emergencies and other disasters/emergencies - Public health departments are often not
integrated into local emergency management
agencies
22Questions?
- Nora OBrien, MPA
- Associate Director of Program Planning
- and Development
- California Primary Care Association
- 1215 K Street, Suite 700, Sacramento, CA 95814
- 916 440-8170 (F) 916 440-8172
- nobrien_at_cpca.org
- www.cpca.org/resources/cepp