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Orlando Pulse nightclub shooting lessons for EMS response to MCIs

Orange County EMS medical director describes expected and unexpected lessons learned from the deadliest shooting in U.S. history at NAEMSP annual meeting

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The patient distribution from the Orlando Pulse nightclub shooting.

Photo/Christopher Hunter

NEW ORLEANS 鈥 The Orlando Pulse nightclub shooting on June 12, 2016 was the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history. It was also the worst attack on the LGBTQ community in documented history and the deadliest terror attack in the U.S. since 9/11.

Christopher Hunter, MD, Ph.D, the Associate Medical Director of the Orange County EMS System, presented on the EMS response to the shooting and aftermath at the 2017 National Association of EMS Physicians annual meeting.

Memorable quotes on Pulse patient triage and care

Here are some memorable quotes and key takeaways from his talk.

鈥淲hen people say this can happen anywhere, this (Orlando) is about as anywhere as it gets.鈥

鈥淲hat we really ended up with over the course of the day was three different MCIs.鈥

鈥淭he civilians that were involved did not run away, they stayed.鈥

鈥淥ne of the less sexy, but more important things that saved lives was throughput within the hospital.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 still not sure triage tags are the answer.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 difficult to coordinate when you have this many agencies responding to something.鈥

鈥淔amily reunification is something we were not prepared for in any way, shape or form.鈥

7 key takeaways on EMS response and transport

Here are seven key takeaways from the EMS response to Pulse, patient triage, patient transport and the challenges of media interest and family reunification.

1. Preparedness matters for performance

Drills may be one of the less flashy sides of preparedness, but they directly impact the cohesive performance of responding agencies when the big event happens.

2. Rogue responders

In a mass shooting like this, units are going to go 鈥渞ogue.鈥 The first unit to arrive on scene was not initially dispatched there, but ended up transporting 11 patients in two hours.

3. Dispatch is going to be overwhelmed

During the Pulse incident, dispatchers received over 600 911 calls over the course of the early morning. If the system is reliant on dispatchers to do anything beyond answer calls, such as sending text alerts to employees, there must be a back-up plan.

4. Triage tags might not get used

Very few triage tags will be used in a large urban environment, likely more useful in scenarios significantly further from a trauma center. During this event, anyone still alive with a bullet wound to a non-extremity was transported immediately upon extrication from the nightclub.

6. Pre-plan for family reunification

The family reunification center was a very unanticipated and resource-heavy need. Have locations predetermined with a hotline and a script ready for collecting the right types of information. Orlando is developing a free computer system for any agency to use that will help collect information on unaccounted individuals

7. Overwhelming media interest

News coverage will be more than the agency has ever seen. The media will do anything they can to gain access to sensational audio, photos and video. Lawyers will need to get creative. In Orlando, they used a law that protects any information related to an autopsy to ensure that photos of the crime scene were not released.

Learn more

To learn more about MCI planning, response, triage and patient care, read these SA国际传媒 articles.

Catherine R. Counts, PHD, MHA, is a health services researcher with Seattle Medic One in the Division of Emergency Medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine. She received both her PhD and MHA from Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine.

Dr. Counts has research interests in domestic healthcare policy, quality, patient safety, organizational theory and culture, and pre-hospital emergency medicine. She is a member of the National Association of EMS Physicians and AcademyHealth. In her free time she trains Bruno, her USAR canine.

Connect with her on Twitter, Facebook, or her website, or reach out via email at ccounts@tulane.edu.

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