Dialysis patients are highly dependent on technologies to sustain their lives, with ongoing needs for transportation, electricity, and water for the dialysis apparatus. Interruption of these needs by a natural disaster can be devastating.
Naoka Murakami, MD, PhD (Mount Sinai Beth Israel) and her colleagues assessed the preparedness of adults receiving outpatient dialysis during the landfall of Hurricane Sandy in New York City in October 2012 at 5 regional centers where electricity had been deprived.
The researchers found that 26.3% of patients missed dialysis sessions and 66.1% received dialysis at non-regular dialysis unit(s). Seventeen percent of patients reported improvement in their dialysis-specific preparedness from before the storm. The improvement was significantly higher in the centers that distributed an "emergency information packet”—which includes information on a patient’s medications, dialysis schedule, comorbid conditions, and geographical/contact information for dialysis centers—after the storm.
“Hemodialysis patients are generally unprepared for natural disasters and there is a need to strengthen both patient and dialysis facility disease-awareness and preparedness to improve outcomes in natural disasters,” said Dr. Murakami. “Our survey showed a positive effect of being prepared through the distribution of a ‘dialysis emergency packet,’ and we propose that this be more conveniently located on a mobile electronic application.”
In another study Anuradha Wadhwa, MD (Loyola University Medical Center) and her colleagues assessed disaster preparedness in their hemodialysis patients and evaluated an approach to disseminate this information by having physicians, nurses, dieticians, and social workers review preparedness-relevant topics with patients.
While 60% of the patients thought they were prepared for an emergency, 80% of were actually not prepared. About 50% of them did not have a plan or know about a backup facility; 35% were unaware of an emergency diet plan. The researchers found that 95% of the patients were interested in learning about emergency preparedness, and 99% found the information provided during the project useful. Using similar criteria for preparedness, a follow up survey showed 80% of the patients were better prepared.
“Emergency preparedness in dialysis patients was lacking, but they were willing to learn. This study highlights that a multidisciplinary approach in an outpatient dialysis unit setting is feasible and effective in educating patients about disaster preparedness,” said Dr. Wadhwa.
Studies: “Impact of Hurricane Sandy on Hemodialysis (HD) Patients and Preparedness for Natural Disasters” (Abstract TH-PO979)
“Disaster Preparedness in Dialysis Patients via Multidisciplinary Approach” (Abstract TH-PO980)
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