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Pediatric Disaster Readiness and Community Hospitals in a Rural American State

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 July 2023

Randy Kearns
Affiliation:
University of New Orleans, New Orleans, USA University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, USA
Toni Gross
Affiliation:
Children's Hospital of New Orleans, New Orleans, USA Tulane University, New Orleans, USA Louisiana State University Health Science Center, New Orleans, USA
Amanda Perry
Affiliation:
Louisiana Department of Health, Baton Rouge, USA
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Abstract

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Introduction:

Pediatric patients represent a small (but important) subset of the patient population routinely visiting emergency departments (ED) each year. With the aim of better understanding the disaster preparedness level for pediatric-specific mass casualty and surge incidents, a survey was conducted involving all hospitals that routinely manage pediatric patients in their emergency departments, to better understand the preparedness levels for these facilities.

Method:

This is a retrospective analysis of data collected in 2014 and repeated in 2021. Our focus included one predominantly rural state in the United States of America (USA). We examined results from surveys conducted where facilities self-reported objective criteria that resulted in a readiness score (as it relates to pediatric readiness). Reporting stratification reflected the annual pediatric ED volume with groups of; Low (<1800/year), Medium (1800-4999 /year), Medium to High (5000-9999/year), and High (>10,000/year).

Results:

Low-volume hospitals scored (Mean=59/Median=56), Medium volume hospitals scored (Mean=62/Median=60), Medium to High volume hospitals (Mean=67/Median=65), and hospitals with High volumes (Mean=82/Median=83). All hospital volume ranges had outlier hospitals that scored between 82-97. The general tendency, lower volume hospitals had a lower level of readiness, and higher volume hospitals had a higher (to much higher) level of readiness.

Conclusion:

Pediatric disaster readiness needs to be improved at the community level. It is encouraging that pediatric disaster readiness has been addressed in the larger medical centers. Yet, it should be noted that even very low-volume hospitals (had outliers with) scores as high as 94 indicating that with ample support, and resources, pediatric disaster preparedness is achievable in every hospital regardless of size or volume. The results point to a need to develop, improve, and distribute resources and support local hospitals with pediatric disaster readiness.

Type
Tabletop Presentations
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine