Mass casualty incident
Pre-hospital
ICS
- Ensure the scene is safe
- Establish Incident Commander (IC)
- Request additional appropriate resources
- Additional ALS/BLS
- Fire resources (HAZMAT, heavy rescue, ect.)
- Medevac
- Establish landing zone
- Establish staging areas for resources
- No more than 8 people per supervisor
- 3-5 preferred
Medical operations
- Establish triage area
- Utilize START triage
- Ensure all patients receive physical tag
- Depending on size on incident, setup shelter for triage area
- In large incident, setup area for dead away from triage
- Call area hospitals and determine how many patients each can take
- Keep record of where each patient goes by tag number
Hospital
- Expect no more than 10 minutes notice for arrival of patients
- Discharge/move current ED patients to accommodate surge
- Ensure large quantity of resources are easily accessible in the (medications, stretchers, ect.)
- Triage all patients as they arrive, even if they were triage in prehospital setting
- Optimal to have 1:8 trauma teams per patient[1]
Differential Diagnosis
Mass casualty incident
- Radiation exposure (disaster)
- Dirty bomb
- Bioterrorism
- Chemical weapons
- Mass shooting
- Natural Disaster (e.g. Hurricane, Earthquake, Tornado, Tsunami, etc)
- Unintentional large-scale incident (e.g. building collapse, train derailment, etc)
- Major pandemic
- Explosions
Diagnosis
References
- ↑ Hirshberg A., 2010 Nov, Triage and trauma workload in mass casualty: a computer model. J Trauma. 69(5):1074-81
