I am not in Florida, but north eastern South Carolina, a couple hours from the coast. My clinic usually runs two shifts of MWF patients and TTS patient. Today, we are running all of our patients on three hour shifts so everyone gets some dialysis ahead of Hurricane Matthew. We will be closed tomorrow. We have a couple open slots, so we are running some evacuated Charleston and Beaufort patients, too. If we have the need, we might open Sunday and run more evacuated patients. Clinics in Atlanta are getting a lot of evacuated patients, some with no orders or labs. They are running them on the end of the loop for three hours and bleaching everything after each run. We might have to run evacuated patients for a couple weeks, depending on damages. We hand out emergency preparedness packages at the beginning of hurricane season. We handed out emergency packets again this week, complete with emergency phone numbers and lists of shelters for patients. The storm should be here overnight and into Saturday, but we shouldn't get too much damage where I am at. Praying for safety for everyone with this awful storm!!!
Clinics in Atlanta are getting a lot of evacuated patients, some with no orders or labs.
It's also useful to know all your settings (NA, Bicarb, bath, flow rates), heparin dose if any, etc. in case you have to communicated this in an emergency.
In this situation its good that our medical industrial complex has motivation to build lots of dialysis centers because it means there is space for evacuees. Not all countries have so much excess capacity.
My province has 4 centres, and they are all at capacity.. the one that I go to is the largest, and they recently started an evening shift on MWF to free up space..
Remember that some of the refugees will be nurses and techs from the effected area. Using them it would be easier to add additional shifts.
QuoteMy province has 4 centres, and they are all at capacity.. the one that I go to is the largest, and they recently started an evening shift on MWF to free up space.. The fact that the center was able to add a shift means it was not at capacity. Centers tend to start an evening shift on MWF before they add a TTS evening shift so, if this is the case, there is still some unused capacity. (of course, it may need more RNs and techs)