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The New York City Pediatric Disaster Coalition Pediatric Intensive-Care Response Team (PIRT)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 July 2023

Michael Frogel
Affiliation:
New York City Pediatric Disaster Coalition, Brooklyn, USA
John Jermyn
Affiliation:
New York City Pediatric Disaster Coalition, Brooklyn, USA
George Foltin
Affiliation:
New York City Pediatric Disaster Coalition, Brooklyn, USA
Arthur Cooper
Affiliation:
New York City Pediatric Disaster Coalition, Brooklyn, USA
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Abstract

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Introduction:

Children represent 25% of the population, have special needs, and are often over-represented in disasters. The New York City Pediatric Disaster Coalition (NYC PDC) is funded by the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) to improve pediatric disaster preparedness and response. PDC worked with a network of pediatric intensivists to create the Pediatric Intensive-Care Response Team (PIRT). PIRT consists of volunteer pediatric intensivists that currently practice in New York City.

Method:

Secondary transport may be requested by hospitals due to a mismatch of resources to needs for patients requiring critical and/or subspecialty care. The team is activated when a disaster involves a significant number of pediatric patients. In the proposed plan, the PIRT physician on-call will triage/prioritize the patients based on acuity and need for services and relay the necessary information to the transport agency. PIRT is designated to provide subject matter expertise and resources during real-world events. PIRT maintains a 24/7 on-call schedule with backup. The PIRT system was tested in four call-down communications drills and a tabletop exercise for prioritization of pediatric mass casualty victims.

Results:

The call-down drills demonstrated the ability to contact the on-call and backup physicians by email or text within 20 minutes and others within one hour. In the tabletop, PIRT members were given 15 patient profiles based on a scenario and asked to prioritize patients based on their injuries/medical needs. This was accomplished in less than 30 minutes, followed by a review and discussion of the rank order. A number of lessons learned were identified and will be presented.

Conclusion:

The NYCPDC has developed and tested a PIRT that is available 24/7 to prioritize patients for secondary transport and offer subject matter expertise during pediatric mass casualty events. This model can be utilized to enhance pediatric disaster preparedness.

Type
Tabletop Presentations
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine