WIHI - A Podcast from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Health & Fitness:Medicine
May 16, 2013
Hurricane Sandy first struck the Caribbean and then the entire East Coast of the United States at the end of October 2012. The storm smacked into New York and New Jersey especially hard, impacting millions. The story of how the largest health care system in the region, North Shore–LIJ, operated throughout to ensure patients and staff were protected and supported, under fierce circumstances, is one that communities and hospitals everywhere can learn from. This WIHI features three leaders from NS-LIJ who were responsible for every kind of decision imaginable before, during, and after the storm.
Some of the decisions included transferring hundreds of nursing home residents out of harm’s way, taking in patients from other hospitals, assisting at area shelters, buying up fuel for ambulances, and opening up a resource center for hospital staff whose homes and neighborhoods had been torn apart and flooded. One of the back stories to NS-LIJ’s response is the degree to which it was built upon critical lessons learned during Hurricane Irene, a year before. In 2009, there was the H1N1 outbreak. In each instance, the health system did things well, and saw where it fell short; now that Hurricane Sandy has come and gone, this same type of assessment continues.
Health care organizations and first responders must prepare for many types of crises and disasters. Reflecting on the recent Boston Marathon bombings, which killed three and seriously injured over 200 (NEJM, April 24, 2013), authors Arthur Kellermann and Kobi Pelag write, “The best way hospitals can prepare is to base their response on a strong foundation of daily health care delivery.” So, routine and reliably safe practices, guided by continuous quality improvement, is lesson one for emergency planning. WIHI host Madge Kaplan invites you to learn more in this timely discussion.
WIHI: Highly Reliable Hospitals: The Work Ahead
WIHI: The Patient Will See You Now: New Technology for New Collaborations
WIHI: The Social Imperative to Demonstrate That Better Care = Lower Costs
WIHI: Have You Had "The Conversation"? Helping Loved Ones Discuss End-of-Life Preferences
WIHI: Removing Barriers to Care with Medical-Legal Partnerships
WIHI: Heard at the Forum: New Ideas and Learning from IHI's 23rd Annual National Forum
WIHI: Night Talks and Nocturnists: New Interventions for the Hospital at Night
WIHI: Health Literacy: New Skills for Health Professionals
WIHI: Organizing for Health: A Story from South Carolina
WIHI: Safety Net Hospitals: Untold Stories of Quality Transformation
WIHI: Family Caregiving, Caregivers, and Compassion
WIHI: Managing Medication Shortage: Best Practices for a Crisis
WIHI: Always Events: Raising Expectations for Patient Experience
WIHI: Payment Reform As We Speak
WIHI: Improving Health Care: The Global View
WIHI: New Models for Patients with Multiple Health and Social Needs
WIHI: Integrity On and Off the Page: A Discussion with JAMA’s (Departing) Editor-in-Chief
WIHI: Leading Across the Continuum
WIHI: Palliative Care = Quality Care
WIHI: The Power to Detect and Improve: Revisiting the IHI Global Trigger Tool and Adverse Events
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