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Something in the Water: Hospital Responds to Water Crisis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2018

Roberta Redfern
Affiliation:
ProMedica Toledo Hospital, Toledo, Ohio
Jennifer Micham
Affiliation:
ProMedica Toledo Hospital, Toledo, Ohio
Rebecca Daniels
Affiliation:
Medical Library, ProMedica Toledo Hospital, Toledo, Ohio
Sue Childers*
Affiliation:
Disaster Specialist
*
Correspondence and reprints request to Sue Childers, MSN, RN, 3939 Buell Avenue, Toledo, OH 43613 (e-mail: disasterprepconsult@yahoo.com).

Abstract

Early on August 2, 2014, in the city of Toledo, Ohio, a media alert informed the public that traces of microcystin, a hazardous toxin, had been detected in the drinking water. The warning stated that residents should not drink, boil, or even touch the contaminated water. A water crisis of this magnitude was recognized to pose a potentially serious and significant impact on patient care and safety in health care environments. ProMedica Toledo Hospital’s Emergency Operation Plan addressed 3 critical issues: safe water availability, alternate cleaning solutions, and preparations for a prolonged crisis. This report details some of the lessons learned throughout the response to the crisis: particularly, because the impact was county-wide which affected other hospitals who used the same vendors, alternate water sources should have been secured in advance; the courier service was vital to delivery of supplies and moving equipment to alternate areas for sterilization processes; and finally, communication with staff and patients was jeopardized by external media outlets. Changes to the emergency plan considering these unanticipated aspects proved useful in a later incident and should be considered by all health care facilities as water emergency policies and procedures are created and reviewed. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2018;12:666–668)

Type
Report from the Field
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health, Inc. 2018 

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