Healthcare emergency planning needs to be more resilient to cope with major hazards, new research reveals
Healthcare emergency planning in the UK must be tougher if it is to withstand extreme situations such as floods and heavy snowfall, new research from º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ reveals.
Researchers from the University’s School of Civil and Building Engineering explored the challenges and opportunities UK healthcare emergency planners and responders have been faced with in emergency situations.
The research team initially sought to identify the history of emergency planning in the UK with a specific focus on healthcare. They then organised an international workshop with professionals across a range of disciplines and sectors and conducted in-depth interviews with experts in social science, healthcare management, utility supply and emergency planning and co-ordination.
The research revealed the following key issues associated with emergency planning in the UK:
- Risk identification – risk matrices are simple and easy tools to help identify risks; however, their limitations could potentially lead to flawed plans. The researchers recommend using more scientific approaches to identify risks based on continuous monitoring and mathematical constructs
- Multi-agency collaboration – a lack of communication between agencies becomes a barrier to effective multi-agency collaboration
- Budget constraints – pressure from the current financial climate has resulted in reduced budgets for emergency planning. This can increase the risk of inadequate planning, a risk which is unlikely to be omitted but which could be mitigated by pooling resources across the multi-agency response teams
- Infrastructure performance – for many years, investment in UK infrastructure, such as the sewage system, was not seen as a priority. This caused the infrastructure to become vulnerable and unable to cope with extreme events. The researchers recommend conducting a vulnerability assessment that feeds into the planning process as a ‘temporary’ solution until infrastructure is upgraded
- Administration of emergency planning – knowledge from individuals and groups is easily lost
- The role of independent advice – emergency planners do not sufficiently utilise the independent expertise that is available to them.
The research findings concluded that improvements were needed in both the long and short term, and that the following action points needed to be addressed by the emergency planning process:
- Identifying and evaluating risks more accurately
- Enhancing opportunities and reducing risks associated with multi-agency approaches
- Ensuring that resources (i.e. staff), processes and infrastructure are effectively integrated into the planning process
- Involving and integrating more with independent parties for extra support
- Innovatively using IT to develop planning models, predict risk and optimise effectiveness and efficiency.
Dr Nebil Achour, who co-ordinated the research for º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ, said: “While the UK has made significant progress towards developing a comprehensive resilience strategy, including plans on how to respond to major emergencies, extreme weather events such as the winter floods of 2013/14, have demonstrated that this process needs more refinement in order to become resilient.
“Our research has demonstrated that there are many opportunities that could provide extra support to the planning and response process, if only they were integrated into the system we currently have.
“Although our research focused on healthcare, we believe that its findings could be advantageous for other businesses such as higher education settings, where major change is also taking place, in order to develop more efficient and effective processes that suit the needs of students and other stakeholders.”
The full study has been published in the International Journal of Emergency Management.