CUPS Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

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CUPS Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

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CUPS Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1. Who we are. Health Education Housing Outreach 140 staff total. Health Clinic. Health Clinic: 1800 visits per month Primary, episodic, crisis based care - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of CUPS Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

Page 1: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

CUPS Health and Education CentreResponse to H1N1

Page 2: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

Who we are• Health• Education• Housing• Outreach

• 140 staff total

Page 3: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

Health Clinic

• Health Clinic:– 1800 visits per

month

– Primary, episodic, crisis based care

– Mental Health, Women’s Health, Prenatal Care, Chronic Disease Management, Specialist

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Family Resource

Centre•1000 visits/month

•Crisis Counselling & Advocacy•Goal Setting & Ongoing Support•Parenting & Life Skills•Low-income Housing Assistance•Children’s Programming

Page 5: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

One World Child Development

Centre

•Early intervention education centre

•Thriving, instead of surviving

•Preschool to Kindergarten

• 60 students

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Outreach and Housing

Other agencies visited by CUPS RNs, NPs and MDs:

•Hospitals•Shelters•Detox and Treatment Centres•The street (DOAP & Outreach team)

•2000 visits/month – •the absolute homeless

Page 7: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

Inner City Agencies: What did we do?

• Dec 2008 - Pandemic Planning Committee

• Jan 2009 - Influenza Pandemic Preparedness for Inner city Agencies

• Feb 2009 - City of Calgary Infectious Disease Management Plan

• April 2009 - Personal Emergency Preparedness

• May 2009 - Pandemic Influenza 101

Page 8: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

CUPS: What did we do?

• Jun-Aug 2009• set up our emergency structure

• June 2009 • Instructions for staff, Microsan stations

• July 2009• Patient triage process implemented and inventory

organized• The ‘Black Book’

Page 9: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

PATIENTRECEPTION

?? ASK ??-cough/cold/fever in last 48hrs?

ORPatient looks very unwell/ is coughing

MICROSAN HANDSMASK

Continue as usual

NO

2nd LPN to Triage need for immediate care ( treatment room) : ILI symptoms : temp/O2 sats/HR

Seat pt in reserve seats

Notify LPN

YES

Non urgent URGENT fever> 38 oral

Pt to wait in lab chairsRefer MD/NP onlyCall Agency PRN

Pt to wait in reserve seats. Refer to RN, MD, NP

MICROSAN

Page 10: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

Getting ready continued…

• Sept 2009 • Train the Trainer program for managers.

• Presentation on influenza preparedness given to all staff, by department

• N 95 masks for medical staff

• Mandatory staff meeting to present CUPS plan and to address expectations and concerns.

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How does influenza spread?

Page 12: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

What was our experience?• More staff than patients sick

• Close to 30% absenteeism at the peak• One ICU admission

– Camp Bus Driver: resulted in one child treated with Tamiflu.

• 8-10 patients with ILI symptoms in any one day• NP swabs only on those with risk factors or very ill.

• Aug 2009- First positive H1N1 patient• Only 3-4 positive H1N1 patients thereafter

• H1N1 <10% of all NP swabs

• No known deaths

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ImmunizationsSeasonal flu vaccine was received from AHS on Oct 16/09. • Oct 16/09 – Nov 4/09 320 given• Nov 5/09 – Feb 28/10 103 given

H1N1 vaccine was received from AHS on Dec 6/09.• December/09 109 given• January/10 64.5 given• February/10 12 given

Dec 6 - 12

Dec 13 - 19

Dec 20 - 31

Jan 3 - 9

Jan 10 -16

Jan 17 - 23

Jan 24 - 30

Jan 31 -

Feb 6

Feb 7 - 13

Feb 14 - 20

Feb 21 - 27

0102030405060

H1N1 Vaccine

Page 14: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

Other clinic actions:• CUPS

• Fluids available for patient distribution.• Individual patient teaching on hand washing and use of masks• H1N1 Flu talks for clients - LPN • H1N1 inservices for staff throughout organization - RN

• Agencies• H1N1 inservices for agencies - RN • Patient assessment, and assistance with suspected outbreaks • Teaching and advocacy to other agencies on behalf of patients.• Community Medicine residents helped agencies develop their

pandemic plans

• Outreach staff transported patients to shelters, hospitals, urgent care centre , hospital pharmacy

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Patient Reactions to H1N1Measures

• Mostly good• Receptive to teaching, well informed• Barriers: Fluids, Tamiflu• Felt hyped by media• Started asking for H1N1 shots in October

• Transportation• Addiction, Mental Health• Other barriers

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Tamiflu• CUPS received Tamiflu from AHS on Nov 4/09

• 1 course dispense for an adult in early December

• Prescriptions written once universal coverage approved

• Tamiflu prescriptions issued for few staff who became ill

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Concerns• Earlier access to vaccine• Immunization for all staff at partner agencies• Earlier and easier access Tamiflu • Central distribution centre for required supplies • Better communication, clear guidelines for who to

contact

Page 18: CUPS  Health and Education Centre Response to H1N1

What if things had gotten worse?

• Phase 1: described• Phase 2: 2 clinic sites

• Ill patients • Well patients for routine care

• Phase 3: Shut down majority of programs, organize 3 teams

• Team 1: Routine care for prenatal patients at CUPS site women’s clinic.

• Team 2: Ill patients at CUPS site main clinic, home visits and

care by support staff• Team 3: Outreach RN/NP/MD/support staff going to shelters for triage and care.

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If you are sick at home with influenza symptoms, please call CUPS.

If sick more than three days please call Health Link: 403-943-LINK