CDC H1N1 Guidance for Clinicians
10 Steps for Medical Offices and Outpatient
Facilities
In Planning for and Responding to
Novel
H1N1 Influenza
It is critical to assure that
medical offices and other outpatient facilities
(e.g., outpatient/ambulatory clinics, outpatient
surgery centers, urgent care centers, physical
therapy/rehabilitation offices or clinics) that
provide routine, episodic, and/or chronic
healthcare services can manage an increased
demand for services in the midst of a Novel HINI
Influenza outbreak. Ensuring a sustainable
community healthcare response will be important
for a likely recurrence of Novel H1NI Flu in the
fall. Visit CDC’s website for up-to-date
information at
http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/
1.
Develop a
Business Continuity Plan
— Novel HINI Flu outbreaks
will impact your organization, employees,
suppliers of critical materiel, and your family.
Identify your office/clinic’s essential
functions and the individuals who perform them.
Make sure you have trained enough people to
properly work in these essential functions and
allow for potential absenteeism. Develop a plan
that will sustain your core business activities
for several weeks. Make sure you have alternate
plans for critical supplies in case there is
disruption in your supply chains. For
information about planning, visit
http://www.ready.gov/business/plan/index.html
2.
Inform
employees about your plan for coping with
additional surge during pandemic — Provide
clear and frequent communication to ensure that
your staff are aware and understand the plan.
Explain any policies and procedures that will he
used to protect staff and your patients, and to
manage a surge of patients. Improve the
resiliency of your staff by advising that
employees have a pandemic family plan or
personal plans.
3.
Plan to
operate your facility if there is significant
staff absenteeism — Are you ready for 20 to
40% of your employees not being able to come to
work? Cross training your staff is key to
resilience here. What else can be done to assure
continuity of operations with reduced staff?
4.
Protect your workplace by asking sick employees
to stay home — Be sure
to ask sick staff to stay home. All personnel
should self monitor daily for signs and symptoms
of febrile respiratory illness. Staff who
develop these symptoms should be instructed not
to report to work, or if at work, should cease
patient care activities and notify their
supervisor. Be sure to align your sick leave
policies so ill staff can stay home. For more
information, see “What to Do If You Get Flu-Like
Symptoms” at
http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/sick.htm
5. Plan
for a surge of patients and increased demands
for your services —
Consider using your telephone system to deliver
messages to incoming callers about when to seek
medical care at your facility, when to seek
emergency care, and where to go for information
about caring for a person with flu at home, see
“Interim Guidance for HINI Flu (Swine Flu):
Taking Care of a Sick Person in Your Home” at
http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/guidance_homecare.htm.
Consider extending your hours of operation to
include telephone triage of patients during a
community outbreak.
6. Care
for patients with Novel H1N1 Flu in your
facility — Make plans
to screen patients for signs and symptoms of
febrile respiratory illness at entry to the
facility. If feasible, use separate waiting and
exam rooms for possible Novel H1N1 Flu patients;
plan to offer surgical masks to symptomatic
patients who are able to wear them (adult and
pediatric sizes should be available), provide
facial tissues, receptacles for their disposal,
and provide hand hygiene products in waiting
areas and examination rooms. For information on
caring for patients, see “Interim Guidance for
Clinicians on Identifying and Caring for
Patients with Swine origin Influenza A (H1N1)
Virus Infection at
http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/identifyingpatients.htm
7.
Take
steps to protect the health of your workforce
during an outbreak of H1N1
— All healthcare personnel who come in close
contact with patients who may have Novel H1N1
Flu should take precautions to include use of
respiratory and eye protection for all patient
care activities. See “Healthcare Workplaces
Classified as Very High or Nigh Exposure Risk
for Pandemic Influenza” at
http://wwv.osha.gov/Publications/exposure-risk-classification-factsheet.html.
For information on the use of
infection control measures including use of
personal protective equipment for staff, see
‘Interim Guidance for Infection Control for Care
of Patients with Confirmed or Suspected Novel
Influenza A (H1N1) Virus Infection in a
Healthcare Setting at
http://www.cdc.gov/H1N1flu/guidelines_infection_control.htm
. Plan now to stockpile sufficient PPE for
your staff, see ‘Proposed Guidance on Workplace
Stockpiling of Respirators and Facemasks for
Pandemic Influenza at
http://www.osha.gov/dsg/guidance/stockpiling-facemasks-respirators.html
.
8.
Provide immunization against seasonal flu at no
cost to your staff — In the fall there may
be several influenza strains circulating at the
same time. Although seasonal flu immunization
will not provide protection to Novel HINI
Influenza, annual influenza vaccination is
recommended for health care professionals and
will likely protect against seasonal influenza
strains, See:
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5502a1.htm?s_cid=rr5502al_e
.
9. Make
sure you know about the pandemic planning and
response activities of the hospitals, outpatient
facilities and local public health in your
community — Actively seek information from
and coordinate with key medical, clinical
facilities and public health departments in your
community to learn about how they will manage
patients during a pandemic. Medical offices,
emergency rooms, urgent care centers and
hospitals in communities with outbreaks will
likely have difficulty managing a large influx
of patients; a coordinated community response is
important to manage surge and assure optimal
patient care. Develop a plan to manage your
patients who do not need to seek emergency
services.
10. Plan
now so you will know where to turn to for
reliable, up-to-date information in your local
community — Staff in
healthcare settings should monitor the CDC H1NI
Flu website at
CDC 2009
H1N1 Flu, and local
and state health department websites for the
latest information. See these websites for
contact information for the Duval County Health
Department at
http://www.dchd.net / and the Florida
Department of Health at
http://www.doh.state.fl.us/DEMO/php/FluInfo.htm
.
Be prepared for a range of
situations. The true impact of Novel H1NI Flu
outbreaks in the coming months will not be known
until it happens. Be prepared for a possibility
that your facility will have significant
increased demand for services and the
possibility that the fall outbreak may have
greater impact than the outbreak in the spring
2009.
For more information, see
the “Medical Offices and Clinics Pandemic
Influenza Planning Checklist’ at
http://pandemicflu.gov/plan/healthcare/medical.html
. Also sign up to receive regular updates
about Novel HINI Influenza, emerging infectious
diseases, and other emergency preparedness and
response information by going to
www.emergency.cdc.gov/clinregistry
|
Local, State, and National
H1N1 Resources
Duval
County Health Department
www.dchd.net
Theresa Isaac, RN, Director,
DCHD Dept. of Emergency Preparedness
904-253-2286
theresa_isaac@doh.state.fl.us
DCHD Epidemiology Department
904-253-1851 (Daytime Phone for Reporting)
904-918-7182 (After Hours Phone)
904-253-1851 (Confidential Fax)
H1N1 Vaccine Information Statements
New!
Live Attenuated
Vaccine Nasal Spray
Inactivated
H1N1 Influenza Shot
Triage
Algorithm for Children
with Influenza-like illness
New!
a
document of the CDC, US Health and Human
Services, and the American Academy of
Pediatrics
H1N1 Influenza
Mass Immunization Campaign
Presentation by Robert Harmon, MD,
Director, DCHD to the DCMS Bioterrorism,
Disaster Response and Homeland Security
Committee on
September 29, 2009 Update
Powerpoint Show (PPS file)
Florida Department of Health (FDOH) -
www.doh.state.fl.us/DEMO/php/FluInfo.htm
H1N1
Vaccine Quick Facts
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) - www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/
CDC
H1N1 Vaccination Planning Guide
Questions & Answers
CDC Novel H1N1
Influenza Resources for Clinicians page
http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/clinicians/
This page is designed to
give clinicians access to the latest guidelines
and information on the evolving novel H1N1
influenza investigation including:
- Clinician Guidance for Patient
Management
- Clinician Guidance for Specific Settings
- Clinician Guidance for Specific
Populations
- Treatment Guidance
- Vaccine Resources
- Additional Resources for Clinicians
- Patient Information and Education
- Laboratories
US Health and Human Services Flu site
www.flu.gov
Florida
SHOTS - www.flshots.com/
Florida SHOTS (State Health Online Tracking System) is a free, statewide,
centralized online immunization registry that helps health-care providers and
schools keep track of immunization records.
World Health
Organization |