Abstract

IntroductionAs the number of disasters caused by natural and non-natural hazards increase, so does the emphasis placed on healthcare security planning for the influx of patients that often accompany such events. This presentation expands on a previously published examination of national healthcare security systems and emphasizes the role of security in the hospital environment during disasters in China, India, and Japan. National emergency preparedness planning systems and disaster type are examined. Elements of planning for a mass-casualty incident (MCI) that most directly impact security planning include mass-notification alert systems, patient routing processes to hospitals (from an MCI scene) and within hospitals (emergency department flow), staffing, disaster triage, patient identification, tracking and discharge, volunteer tracking, and the adaptability and flexibility of space and processes.MethodsResearchers conducted extensive literature reviews of country-specific health care and physical security elements of patient surge. The comparative analysis was augmented by communication with national healthcare security experts.ConclusionsPositive associations exist between increased disasters and the level of priority and funding given to healthcare security measures in disaster planning. National characteristics of governance, landmass, disaster history, and population influenced the development of healthcare security systems and planning for patient surge incidents. Planning for the mental health impact of terrorism victims, and its subsequent impact to patient surge into hospitals was more relevant in the literature for both India and Japan.

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