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Customizing the Tool: The Tailoring of Crisis-Management and Mass-Casualty Software
Kate Rosenblatt Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Criss and her team are now focused on developing a new patient tracking system that communicates with EMS agency software no matter what type of system the crew uses. “What we are trying to do,” Criss said, “is take information from disparate patient tracking systems … so that if one EMS agency is using one system and another one is using something else, and it’s a mutual-aid [situation], or a mass-casualty that requires mutual aid, we still have the ability to capture that data in one dashboard so that … [the user] doesn’t have to go back and forth and back and forth between systems.” The ability of the different software systems to interface permits the different agencies involved to communicate with one another without doubling the overall workload. Speed, Compatibility, and Specialty Care One company committed to opening those lines of communication is EWAPhoenix, an emergency management software company headquartered in Herndon, Virginia. The company’s Patient Tracking module, released in March of this year, is designed to send the patient’s collected medical information directly to the hospital, and can be used daily as well as in emergencies. The Phoenix, a hand-held wireless device, is compatible with many crisis-management systems, including WebEOC. EWAPhoenix Product Manager Thomas Bock estimates that there are at least 50 different systems being used in the 143 hospitals the company works with in Indiana, so the company works not only with the hospital but also with the other software vendors to create compatible programs. The Patient Tracking module has been designed for EMT use, with the federal- and state-required medical forms sent to a Windows Mobile device that possesses a barcode and magnetic-stripe reading capability. The pages are pulled up on the screen as the EMT needs them, “If an EMT doesn’t need to know your contamination level, then that page is never launched, saving time and scrolling and all that other stuff that putting an old form on a hand-held might do,” Bock said. He estimated that on a typical call the EMT would have the patient’s medical and biographical information in less than two minutes. After treatment of the patient (which also is logged into the hand-held), the EMT can check hospital status on the module because the system incorporates not only the HAvBED counts for the hospitals in the area but also the specialty care available at each hospital, “so the EMTs know before they have even transported a victim where to take that victim,” Bock said. The information travels from the hand-held to a network established at the hospital, or at a triage center, so that, when the ambulance pulls into the hospital bay, the patient’s medical information is already in the system. “The Phoenix server is constantly in contact with either the hospital system or the system in use at the triage area,” Bock commented. Collaboration between and among the agencies and organizations involved in an emergency situation is key to the successful management of a disaster and is rapidly becoming just as important for mass-casualty and crisis-management software. Officials at the Maryland Institute for Emergency Medical Service Systems (MIEMSS) in Baltimore are merging their Facility Resource Emergency Database (FRED) with the state’s County and Hospital Alert Tracking System (CHATS) into one application. “We’ll be using software to bring both of them together, and having them in one place [will allow] whoever is managing an incident to view it all together,” said Director of Emergency Operations and Regional Programs John Donahue. The bottom line is that officials such as Donahue and Criss use emergency-management software not necessarily as is, but as needed. In short, the future of mass-casualty and crisis software may not be the one and only perfect program but, rather, a series of adaptable ones. ____________________________ Kate Rosenblatt is a writer based in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area. She has a background in education reform, communications, and business development, and has written for a number of publications on a broad range of subjects ranging from finance to fashion to public safety and related topics. Email questions, comments, or feedback regarding this article. |
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