Journal of Healthcare Leadership (Nov 2022)

Augmentation of a Hospital Incident Command System to Support Continued Waves of the COVID-19 Pandemic

  • Hartnett J,
  • Houston KD,
  • Rose SJ

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 14
pp. 191 – 201

Abstract

Read online

Josette Hartnett, Kaly D Houston, Suzanne J Rose Department of Research and Discovery, Stamford Hospital, Stamford, CT, USACorrespondence: Suzanne J Rose, Department of Research and Discovery, Stamford Hospital, P.O. Box 9317, Stamford, CT, 06902, USA, Email [email protected]: Stamford Hospital (SH) is a 305 bed Level II Trauma center located in Fairfield County, the epicenter of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Connecticut. The COVID-19 pandemic was a fast paced, rapidly evolving crisis, presenting our leadership team with unique challenges related to resource availability, patient care, and staff safety. The existing Hospital Incident Command System (HICS) was activated in March 2020 to coordinate our operational emergency management planning, response, and recovery capability for this unplanned event. Although HICS lays the groundwork for hospital preparations and protocol implementation, it is not designed to withstand prolonged crisis circumstances. Given the conditions that the COVID-19 pandemic presented, the possibility for future waves became an impending reality, prompting the need for a long-term solution. To establish guidelines that promoted balance between necessary preparations in the case of additional surges of the pandemic and concurrent resumption then maintenance of routine hospital operations, the SH COVID-19 Playbook was created. The Playbook, presented here, is arranged in accordance with the evidence-based 4 S’s (Space, Staff, Systems, and Stuff) strategic critical care planning framework, to address surge capacity management within our hospital’s four main patient care areas and additional supportive services. Through feedback from frontline caregivers and leaders within SH, the Playbook captures our experience, best practices, and insight acquired during the first wave of the pandemic. Established with the intentions of equipping leadership and staff globally, guidelines are presented to aid in the navigation of future pandemic surges and successfully care for COVID-19 patients, ensure staff safety, allow for normal services to operate, and provide optimal communication and support for the community, patients, and staff.Keywords: COVID-19, Hospital Incident Command System, surge capacity, emergency preparedness, healthcare leadership, critical care guidance framework

Keywords