• J Burn Care Res · Jan 2008

    Review

    Burn disaster response planning: an urban region's approach.

    • Roger W Yurt, Eliot J Lazar, Nicole E Leahy, Nicholas V Cagliuso, Angela C Rabbitts, Vijay Akkapeddi, Arthur Cooper, Antonio Dajer, Jack Delaney, Frank P Mineo, Steven H Silber, Lewis Soloff, Kevin Magbitang, and David W Mozingo.
    • NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, New York, NY 10021, USA.
    • J Burn Care Res. 2008 Jan 1;29(1):158-65.

    AbstractThe objective of this study was to describe a draft response plan for the tiered triage, treatment, or transportation of 400 adult and pediatric victims (50/million population) of a burn disaster for the first 3 to 5 days after injury using regional resources. Review of meeting minutes and the 11 deliverables of the draft response plan was performed. The draft burn disaster response plan developed for NYC recommended: 1) City hospitals or regional burn centers within a 60-mile distance be designated as tiered Burn Disaster Receiving Hospitals (BDRH); 2) these hospitals be divided into a four-tier system, based on clinical resources; and 3) burn care supplies be provided to Tier 3 nonburn centers. Existing burn center referral guidelines were modified into a hierarchical BDRH matrix, which would vector certain patients to local or regional burn centers for initial care until capacity is reached; the remainder would be cared for in nonburn center facilities for up to 3 to 5 days until a city, regional, or national burn bed becomes available. Interfacility triage would be coordinated by a central team. Although recommendations for patient transportation, educational initiatives for prehospital and hospital providers, city-wide, interfacility or interagency communication strategies and coordination at the State or Federal levels were outlined, future initiatives will expound on these issues. An incident resulting in critically injured burn victims exceeding the capacity of local and regional burn center beds may be a reality within any community and warrants a planned response. To address this possibility within New York City, an initial draft of a burn disaster response has been created. A scaleable plan using local, state, regional, or federal health care and governmental institutions was developed.

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