Reopening Shuttered Hospitals to Expand Surge Capacity (continued)

Chapter 8. Conclusions

Table 17 summarizes our findings about the status of shuttered hospitals, and the additional needs for surge use.

With few exceptions, all of the necessary facility infrastructure, staffing, equipment, supplies, transportation, security, and information systems can be obtained, created, or installed at a partially-shuttered hospital to bring it to readiness as a surge facility.  Scenario 2 (infectious disease) raises issues that are of less concern under Scenario 1 (mass casualty trauma event) but even these more extensive needs can be addressed.

When community emergency planners consider the partially-shuttered hospitals that might be suitable for surge capacity expansion, a grading system might be helpful for prioritizing the most likely candidate facilities.  This prioritization will need to be evaluated periodically in each community, since the status and merits of one shuttered hospital over another can change over time. We suggest the following factors which together might help in this prioritization:

Planners could rank potential surge facilities using a list such as this as a first step in identifying the best candidate facilities.

The most efficient and comprehensive approach for opening and operating a surge facility might be for an existing tertiary medical center to take on the responsibility of making the surge facility a 'satellite' of the medical center. This would be more feasible if a former hospital is the satellite, rather than a school, hotel, or some other facility. Existing contracts and vendor agreements could be extended to the satellite surge facility and medical, security, materials management and other staff could lend their expertise, especially in the planning phase. Patient charts could remain unified and pharmacy and lab services could be extended to the satellite. While some cities may not have a tertiary medical center or an enterprise willing and able to fill this role, and while this approach is certainly not the only one that would work, it is a logistically reasonable and efficient approach for planners to consider.

Federal and State regulations pose barriers to the rapid conversion and reopening of a shuttered hospital (e.g., EMTALA, Medicare Conditions of Participation, HIPAA).74 These issues need to be considered well in advance of a mass casualty event necessitating surge capacity expansion at any facility that is not a functioning hospital.  Provision for waivers could be set in place in advance, for example, to permit this surge capacity expansion.  Perhaps the Federal government could offer 'model' waiver legislation as a starting point for States to consider.

Policy questions that planners need to consider remain unanswered, including:

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