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CT Hospital was Prepared for Power Plant Explosion

Scott Wallask, for HealthLeaders Media, February 9, 2010

While the facility's e-mail and phone alert system reached out to off-duty managers and staff, the nursing supervisor huddled with other nurses, security officers, and hospitalists to plot out immediate actions in response to the explosion, Hite says. For example:

  • Hospitalists began determining which patients could be rapidly discharged in order to free up beds
  • OR staff began preparing the post-anesthesia care unit to open up beds
  • Security officers were posted at every hospital entrance in anticipation that concerned visitors and reporters would congregate at the facility seeking information about victims

In the end, the hospital treated about two dozen people from the explosion scene, but initial projections indicated 60 to 100 potential victims. It also wasn't immediately clear what caused the explosion.

"At the time, we didn't know if there were chemicals involved," Hite says. Although a field morgue was set up at the power plant, Hite knew the hospital might be asked to store corpses. The facility's morgue capacity is 10 bodies, but the building has a utility hookup that allows refrigerated trucks to connect to hospital systems at the loading dock.

Had it been needed, the hospital could have had a refrigerated trailer at the hospital within a couple of hours to handle overflow cadavers, Hite says. As it turned out, there were five deaths in the explosion.

Another useful arrangement that Hite mentioned: The hospital's EMS manager kept tabs on what was happening in at the power plant from a paramedic on the scene. The EMS manager, in turn, acted as the liaison between the hospital's emergency operations center and the response scene, without the need to interact with busy police and fire officials, Hite said.


Scott Wallask is senior managing editor for the Hospital Safety Center. He can be reached at swallask@hcpro.com.