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Journal Article

Citation

Martchenke J, Pointer JE. Prehosp. Disaster Med. 1994; 9(3): 146-153.

Affiliation

Emergency Department, San Francisco General Hospital, Emergency Medical Services Agency, Calif., USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1994, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10155521

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study hospital disaster operations following a major United States disaster. DESIGN: Researchers interviewed all 51 hospital administrators and 49 of 51 emergency department (ED) charge nurses and emergency physicians who were on duty at the study hospitals during the 13-hour period immediately following the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. SETTING: The 51 acute-care hospitals in the six northern California counties most affected by the Loma Prieta earthquake. MEASUREMENTS: Questionnaires and in-person interviews. RESULTS: The most frequently noted problem was lack of communications within and among organizations. Hospitals received inadequate information about the disaster from local governmental agencies. Forty-three percent of hospitals had inadequate back-up power configurations, and five hospitals sustained total back-up generator failures. Twenty hospitals performed partial evacuations. CONCLUSIONS: The Loma Prieta earthquake did not cause total disruption of hospital services. Hospitals need to work with local governmental agencies and internal hospital departments to improve disaster communications.


Language: en

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