Hospital disaster staffing: If you call, will they come?

Q3 Medicine
David C Cone, Bethany A Cummings
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Objective: To assess hospital employees' attitudes and needs regarding work commitments during disasters.

Methods: A 12-item survey was distributed to employees at nine hospitals in five states. Questions addressed willingness to work during a disaster or its aftermath, support services that could encourage employees to remain for extended hours, and conflicting emergency response obligations (e.g., being a volunteer firefighter) that might prevent employees from working at the hospital. Anonymity was assured, and approval was obtained from each hospital's institutional review board.

Results: Of the 2,004 surveys distributed, 1,711 (85 percent) were returned. Eighty-seven percent of respondents were willing to work after a fire/rescue/collapse mass casualty incident. Respondents were otherwise less willing to work in response to a man-made disaster (biological event: 58 percent; chemical event: 58 percent; radiation event: 57 percent) than a natural disaster (snowstorm: 83 percent; flood: 81 percent; hurricane: 78 percent; earthquake: 79 percent; tornado: 77 percent; ice storm: 75 percent; flu epidemic: 72 percent) (p < 0.001 for all comparisons by χ2 testing). While 44 percent of respondents would come to work in response to any of the 11 disaster types listed, 19 percent were only willing to cover four or fewer types. Long-distance phone service (694, 41 percent), email access (584, 34 percent), pet care (568, 33 percent), and child care (506, 30 percent) were the most common support needs, and 365 respondents (21 percent) reported a conflicting emergency response obligation.

Conclusions: The majority of hospital workers surveyed were willing to report to work in response to some types of disasters but not others, and some indicated they might not be available at all due to conflicting emergency response obligations.

医院救灾人员:如果你打电话,他们会来吗?
目的:了解医院员工对灾害期间工作承诺的态度和需求。方法:对美国5个州9家医院的职工进行问卷调查。问题涉及在灾害期间或灾后工作的意愿,可能鼓励员工延长工作时间的支持服务,以及可能妨碍员工在医院工作的相互冲突的应急响应义务(例如,成为志愿消防员)。匿名得到了保证,并获得了每家医院机构审查委员会的批准。结果:在发放的2004份调查问卷中,回收了1711份(85%)。87%的受访者表示愿意在发生火灾/救援/坍塌等大规模伤亡事故后继续工作。在其他方面,受访者不太愿意为应对人为灾难(生物事件:58%;化学事件:58%;辐射事件:57%)比自然灾害(暴风雪:83%;洪水:81%;飓风:78%;地震:79%;龙卷风:77%;冰暴:75%;流感流行:72%)(经χ2检验,所有比较p < 0.001)。虽然44%的受访者会在应对列出的11种灾难类型中的任何一种时上班,但19%的受访者只愿意应对四种或更少的灾难类型。长途电话服务(694,41 %)、电子邮件访问(584,34 %)、宠物护理(568,33 %)和儿童护理(506,30 %)是最常见的支持需求,365名受访者(21%)报告了相互冲突的紧急响应义务。结论:接受调查的大多数医院工作人员愿意在应对某些类型的灾害时上班,但不愿意在应对其他类型的灾害时上班,有些人表示,由于应急响应义务相互冲突,他们可能根本无法上班。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
American journal of disaster medicine
American journal of disaster medicine Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: With the publication of the American Journal of Disaster Medicine, for the first time, comes real guidance in this new medical specialty from the country"s foremost experts in areas most physicians and medical professionals have never seen…a deadly cocktail of catastrophic events like blast wounds and post explosion injuries, biological weapons contamination and mass physical and psychological trauma that comes in the wake of natural disasters and disease outbreak. The journal has one goal: to provide physicians and medical professionals the essential informational tools they need as they seek to combine emergency medical and trauma skills with crisis management and new forms of triage.
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