Developing health system surge capacity: community efforts in jeopardy.

Research brief Pub Date : 2008-06-01
Laurie E Felland, Aaron Katz, Allison Liebhaber, Genna R Cohen
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Abstract

Since Sept. 11, 2001, communities have responded to the federal call to enhance health care surge capacity--the space, supplies, staffing and management structure to care for many injured or ill people during a terrorist attack, natural disaster or infectious disease pandemic. Communities with varied experience handling emergencies are building broad surge capacity, including transportation, communication, hospital care and handling mass fatalities, according to a new study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). Communities rely on federal funding to help coordinate and plan across agencies and providers, conduct training and drills, recruit volunteers, and purchase equipment and stockpile supplies. The current federal focus on pandemic influenza has helped prepare for all types of emergencies, although at times communities struggle with fragmented and restrictive funding requirements. Despite progress, communities face an inherent tension in developing surge capacity. The need for surge capacity has increased at the same time that daily health care capacity has become strained, largely because of workforce shortages, reimbursement pressures and growing numbers of uninsured people. Payers do not subsidize hospitals to keep beds empty for an emergency, nor is it practical for trained staff to sit idle until a disaster hits. To compensate, communities are trying to develop surge capacity in a manner that supports day-to-day activities and stretches existing resources in an emergency. Many of these efforts--including integrating outpatient providers, expanding staff roles and adapting standards of care during a large-scale emergency--require greater coordination, guidance and policy support. As time passes since 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina, federal funding for surge capacity has waned, and communities are concerned about losing surge capacity they have built.

发展卫生系统的应急能力:社区努力受到威胁。
自2001年9月11日以来,社区响应了联邦政府的呼吁,加强了医疗应急能力——在恐怖袭击、自然灾害或传染病大流行期间为许多受伤或生病的人提供医疗服务的空间、供应、人员配备和管理结构。根据卫生系统变革研究中心(HSC)的一项新研究,具有不同处理紧急情况经验的社区正在建立广泛的应急能力,包括运输、通信、医院护理和处理大规模死亡事件。社区依靠联邦资金帮助各机构和供应商之间进行协调和规划,开展培训和演习,招募志愿者,购买设备和储存物资。目前联邦政府对大流行性流感的关注有助于为所有类型的紧急情况做好准备,尽管有时社区难以应对零散和限制性的资金需求。尽管取得了进展,但社区在发展应急能力方面面临着内在的紧张关系。在对快速应变能力的需求增加的同时,日常保健能力变得紧张,主要原因是劳动力短缺、报销压力和无保险人数不断增加。纳税人不会资助医院在紧急情况下保持床位空置,训练有素的员工坐等灾难降临也不现实。为了弥补这一点,社区正在努力发展应急能力,以支持日常活动,并在紧急情况下动用现有资源。其中许多努力——包括整合门诊服务提供者、扩大工作人员的作用以及在大规模紧急情况下调整护理标准——需要加强协调、指导和政策支持。自9/11和卡特里娜飓风以来,随着时间的推移,联邦政府为应急能力提供的资金已经减少,社区担心失去他们建立的应急能力。
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