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Some years ago when I first started in practice, a very large hospital in our area was having trouble getting patients rapidly admitted from the ER to the floors. This resulted in a tremendous backlog of patients and extreme ER overcrowding. This naturally increased patient wait times and directly impacted the health of those coming to the ER. So, naturally, the hospital system formed a committee and hired consultants. They looked at every single variable: time to laboratory, time to X-ray, nursing changeover, bed request time and on and on and on. Do you know what they found? The roadblock in the movement of patients through this major medical system was housekeeping. Think about that. Housekeepers, traditionally the lowest paid and least-skilled division of employment of the hospital, were responsible for the movement and throughput of patients more than any other factor.
If the rooms on the floor were not cleaned fast enough, then no patients could move from the ER to the floor, and no patients from the waiting room to the ER. ER wait times rose and patient care suffered. Housekeepers handcuffed the entire system, and not because they were lazy. The regulations, protocols and procedures put into place to clean a room are so extensive that rapid room turnover was next to impossible with the current staffing model. That stuck with me. What is the rate-limiting step in a mass casualty scenario or massive patient influx that would handcuff us? Where will all the preparedness collapse? What is the leaking O-ring? What am I afraid will fail?
Now imagine that huge numbers of hospital staff – from doctors to housekeepers, from food services to registration, from security and parking to transportation will decide not show up. They will call in sick or simply just say: “No, I’m not coming to work today.” In just a few days, human waste, debris, soiled linens, the sick, the dying and the bodies will pile up. We will be overwhelmed and unable to offer much in the way of assistance because the labor-intensive protocols that allow us to safely care for even one patient are just too exhausting. These procedures are barely repeatable more than once or twice of day, and fraught with so many steps and potential for mistake that it becomes too physically and emotionally taxing for the staff to do … so they simply wont show up.
And I am not sure I will, either
originally posted by: conspiracytheoristIAM
a reply to: JG1993
The problem seems to be ultimately a logistical and communication problem. Trying to keep masses of sick contagious people from instinctively running to the nearest hospital, so that they can be "patients", be treated and survive. How can a group like this be diverted and ultimately convinced to stay home ? We need somebody we trust and will listen to.....our fearless leaders in D.C. ?? A real movement of common sense ideas , precautions and simple preventative measures that convinces people to be responsible for themselves. What are the chances of that ever happening ?
originally posted by: conspiracytheoristIAM
a reply to: clenz
I think you're confusing cowardice with the reality of the situation. If this disease , ebola, gets out of hand our health-care system will rapidly collapse. The ER doctor in the OP's article explains it quite well !
originally posted by: conspiracytheoristIAM
a reply to: redhorse
Apparently you didn't read the article the OP presented. In it the doctor explains why people should stay away from a hospital.........so it wouldn't be overwhelmed ! If the death rate is 50% , how many hospital workers will actually keep going to work ? Once again you need to read the article before commenting on what I said. He explained why people sick with ebola should stay home.....rest , fluids and prayer were his suggestion for care, which can be accomplished just as well at home. Ebola has no cure and most people in W. Africa have died from it !! Conditions are better here , because there is no endemic as of yet. If ebola spreads here like it has in Africa, things will become just as chaotic. We need to quarantine all returning from W. Africa , now !! And no I wasn't kidding...read the damn article.