Skip to main content
×
×
Home

How Will Military/Civilian Coordination Work for Reception of Mass Casualties from Overseas?

  • Colin Mackenzie (a1), John Donohue (a2), Philip Wasylina (a3), Woodrow Cullum (a4), Peter Hu (a5) and David M. Lam (a6)...
Abstract
Introduction:

In Maryland, there have been no military/civilian training exercises of the Medical Mutual Aid Agreement for >20 years. The aims of this paper are to describe the National Disaster Medical System (NDMS), to coordinate military and civilian medical mutual aid in response to arrival of overseas mass casualties, and to evaluate the mass-casualty reception and bed “urge” capacity of Maryland NDMS Hospitals.

Methods:

Three tabletop exercises and a functional exercise were performed using a simulated, overseas, military mass-casualty event. The first tabletop exercise was with military and civilian NMDS partners.The second tested the revised NDMS activation plan. The third exercised the Authorities of State Emergency Medical System and Walter Reed Army Medical Center Directors of Emergency Medicine over Maryland NDMS hospitals, and their Medical Mutual Aid Agreement.The functional exercise used Homeland Security Exercise Evaluation Program tools to evaluate reception, triage, staging, and transportation of 160 notional patients (including 20 live, moulaged “patients”) and one canine.

Results:

The first tabletop exercise identified deficiencies in operational protocols for military/civilian mass-casualty reception, triage, treatment, and problems with sharing a Unified Command. The second found improvements in the revised NDMS activation plan.The third informed expectations for NDMS hospitals. In the functional exercise, all notional patients were received, triaged, dispatched, and accounted in military and five civilian hospitals within two hours. The canine revealed deficiencies in companion/military animal reception, holding, treatment, and evacuation. Three working groups were suggested: (1) to ensure 100% compliance with triage tags, patient accountability, and return of equipment used in mass casualty events and exercises; (2) to investigate making information tech-nology and imaging networks available for Emergency Operation Centers and Incident Command; and (3) to establish NDMS training, education, and evaluation to further integrate and support civil-military operations.

Conclusions:

The exercises facilitated military/state inter-agency coopera-tion, resulting in revisions to the Maryland Emergency Operations Plan across all key state emergency response agencies. The recommendations from these exercises likely apply to the vast majority of NDMS activities in the US.

Copyright
Corresponding author
110 South Paca Street, 4th Floor, Room 4-S-132, Baltimore, Maryland 21201, USA, E-mail: cmack003@umaryland.edu
References
Hide All
1.Cecchine, G, Wermuth, MA, Molander, RC, McMahon, KS, Malkin, J, Brower, J, Woodward, JD, Barbisch, DF: Triage for Civil Support—Using Military Medical Assets to Respond to Terrorist Attacks. Arlington, VA; Rand Corporation/National Defense Research Institute, 2004.
2.United States House of Representatives Committee on Government Reform—Minority Staff; Special Investigations Division: “The Decline of the National Disaster Medical System”. Washington, DC, House of Representatives, December 2005.
3.Lowell, J: Medical Readiness Responsibilities and Capabilities: A Strategy for Realigning and Strengthening the Federal Medical Response. Washington, DC, Department of Homeland Security; 03 January 2005.
4.Lister, SA: Hurricane Katrina: The Public Health and Medical Response. Washington, DC; Congressional Research Service, 21 September 2005.
5.Devir, WL: 2004 Hurricane AAR's. NDMS Conference; 03 May, 2005. Available at oversight.house.gov/documents/20051209101459-64871.ppt.
7.Emergency Management Institute Home Page: Available at http://train-ing.fema.gov/EMIWEB/. Accessed 11 June 2007.
8.Hu, PF, Mackenzie, CF, Gilbert, GR, Poropatich, RK, Seebode, S, Ho, D, Gagliano, D, Xiao, Y: Real-time rapid deployable video system (RDVS) for patient tracking and disaster management. Proceedings of the 17th World Conference on Disaster Management Conference. 2007.
9.Ho, D, Hu, P, Seebode, S, Mackenzie, CF, Brooks, T, Handley, C, Hirshon, JM, Wasylina, P, Johnson, S: Real-Time Video Review: Data Collection Techniques to Support Situation Awareness. Proceedings of the American Telemedicine Association (ATA) Annual Conference. 2007.
10.Mackenzie, C, Hu, P, Fausboll, C, Nerlich, M, Benner, T, Gagliano, D, Whitlock, W, Lam, D, Xiao, Y: Challenges to remote emergency decision-making for disasters or homeland security. Cognit Tech Work 2007;9(1)1524.
Recommend this journal

Email your librarian or administrator to recommend adding this journal to your organisation's collection.

Prehospital and Disaster Medicine
  • ISSN: 1049-023X
  • EISSN: 1945-1938
  • URL: /core/journals/prehospital-and-disaster-medicine
Please enter your name
Please enter a valid email address
Who would you like to send this to? *
×

Keywords:

Metrics

Full text views

Total number of HTML views: 0
Total number of PDF views: 13 *
Loading metrics...

Abstract views

Total abstract views: 84 *
Loading metrics...

* Views captured on Cambridge Core between September 2016 - 12th June 2018. This data will be updated every 24 hours.