H1N1 Planning and Response: 10 Steps from the CDC for Medical Offices and Outpatient Facilities

CDC Arlen Specter Headquarters and Emergency Operations Center, Atlanta

The following was released yesterday by the CDC:

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 H1N1 influenza outbreak. Ensuring a sustainable community healthcare response will be important for a likely recurrence of novel H1N1 flu in the fall. See CDC’s H1N1 website for up-to-date information.

1. Develop a Business Continuity Plan – Novel H1N1 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 see: http://www.ready.gov/business/plan/index.html.

2. Inform employees about your plan for coping with additional […]

Low-Tech Strategies That Significantly Reduce Hospital Infections

Torress-Cook's strategy includes meticulous hand-washing by the staff, head-to-toe cleaning of the patients (including under their nails and oral care), daily cleaning of hospital rooms, giving antibiotics only when cultures prove they are necessary, and feeding yogurt to patients to replenish bacteria in the gut. In the last year, AJN has featured articles on several of these, including hand-washing, oral care, and appropriate antimicrobial use. Based on your own experience, what other relatively simple procedures might significantly improve outcomes in the workplace?

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