Monday, April 21, 2008

2008 Atlantic Hurricane Season Forecasts

http://typhoon.atmos.colostate.edu/forecasts/

April 9, 2008
Philip J. Klotzbach1 and William M. Gray
Colorado State University

ATLANTIC BASIN SEASONAL HURRICANE FORECAST FOR 2008
  • 15 Named Storms
  • 80 Named Storm Days
  • 8 Hurricanes
  • 40 Hurricane Days
  • 4 Intense Hurricanes

Probabilities for at least one major hurricane (Category 3 or higher) landfall on each of the following coastal areas:

  1. Entire U.S. coastline - 69% (average for last century is 52%)
  2. U.S. East Coast Including Peninsula Florida - 45% (average for last century is 31%)
  3. Gulf Coast from the Florida Panhandle westward to Brownsville - 44% (average for last century is 30%)
  4. Above-average major hurricane landfall risk in the Caribbean
Current conditions in the Atlantic basin are quite favorable for an active hurricane season. Both of our early April predictors call for a very active hurricane season in 2008. The current sea surface temperature pattern in the Atlantic is a pattern typically observed before very active seasons. Waters off the coast of Iberia as well as the eastern tropical Atlantic are very warm right now (Figure 6). The Azores High has also been quite weak during the month of March. Typically, a weakened Azores High leads to weaker trade winds that enhance warm SST anomalies due to reduced levels of evaporation, mixing and upwelling in the eastern tropical Atlantic.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

ESF-8 FEMA Independent Study Course

FEMA Independent Study (IS) courses are online, free courses available to the public. There is a new course, IS-808 Emergency Support Function (ESF) #8 – Public Health and Medical Services.

http://training.fema.gov/EMIWeb/IS/IS808.asp

As part of the NRF, Emergency Support Functions (ESFs) are primary mechanisms at the operational level used to organize and provide assistance. This series of courses is designed to overview each of the 15 ESFs. This course provides an introduction to Emergency Support Function (ESF) #8 – Public Health and Medical Services. Support.

This online course is aboue 30 minutes and offers a certificate of completion if you choose to take (and pass) the final exam.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Disaster-related Conditions for Coverage

For the complete document, please visit the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/CFCsAndCoPs/13_ESRD.asp

Emergency and disaster-related Conditions for Coverage are outlined in the paragaphs §494.60 Condition: Physical environment.

§494.60 Condition: Physical environment

(d) Standard: Emergency preparedness. The dialysis facility must implement processes and procedures to manage medical and nonmedical emergencies that are likely to threaten the health or safety of the patients, the staff, or the public. These emergencies include, but are not limited to, fire, equipment or power failures, care-related emergencies, water supply interruption, and natural disasters likely to occur in the facility’s geographic area.

(1) Emergency preparedness of staff. The dialysis facility must provide appropriate training and orientation in emergency preparedness to the staff. Staff training must be provided and evaluated at least annually and include the following:

(i) Ensuring that staff can demonstrate a knowledge of emergency procedures, including informing patients of--

(A) What to do;

(B) Where to go, including instructions for occasions when the geographic area of the dialysis facility must be evacuated;

(C) Whom to contact if an emergency occurs while the patient is not in the dialysis facility. This contact information must include an alternate emergency phone number for the facility for instances when the dialysis facility is unable to receive phone calls due to an emergency situation (unless the facility has the ability to forward calls to a working phone number under such
emergency conditions); and

(D) How to disconnect themselves from the dialysis machine if an emergency occurs.

(ii) Ensuring that, at a minimum, patient care staff maintain current CPR certification; and

(iii) Ensuring that nursing staff are properly trained in the use of emergency equipment and emergency drugs.

(2) Emergency preparedness patient training. The facility must provide appropriate orientation and training to patients, including the areas specified in paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section.

(3) Emergency equipment. Emergency equipment, including, but not limited to, oxygen, airways, suction, defibrillator or automated external defibrillator, artificial resuscitator, and emergency drugs, must be on the premises at all times and immediately available.

(4) Emergency plans. The facility must--

(i) Have a plan to obtain emergency medical system assistance when needed;

(ii) Evaluate at least annually the effectiveness of emergency and disaster plans and update them as necessary; and

(iii) Contact its local disaster management agency at least annually to ensure that such agency is aware of dialysis facility needs in the event of an emergency.

(e) Standard: Fire safety.

(1) Except as provided in paragraph (e)(2) of this section, by [OFR - insert 300 days after publication in the Federal Register], the dialysis facility must comply with applicable provisions of the 2000 edition of the Life Safety Code of the National Fire Protection Association (which is incorporated by reference at §403.744(a)(1)(i) of this chapter).

(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (e)(1) of this section, dialysis facilities participating in Medicare as of [OFR - insert 180 days after publication in the Federal Register] utilizing non-sprinklered buildings on such date may continue to use such facilities if such buildings were constructed before January 1, 2008 and State law so permits.

(3) If CMS finds that a fire and safety code imposed by the facility’s State law adequately protects a dialysis facility’s patients, CMS may allow the State survey agency to apply the State’s fire and safety code instead of the Life Safety Code.

(4) After consideration of State survey agency recommendations, CMS may waive, for individual dialysis facilities and for appropriate periods, specific provisions of the Life Safety Code, if the following requirements are met:

(i) The waiver would not adversely affect the health and safety of the dialysis facility’s patients; and

(ii) Rigid application of specific provisions of the Life Safety Code would result in an unreasonable hardship for the dialysis facility.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Press Release: CMS RELEASES REGULATION MODERNIZING DIALYSIS CENTERS

This is a media release from the CMS website...

For Immediate Release: Thursday, April 03, 2008
Contact: CMS Office of Public Affairs202-690-6145

CMS RELEASES REGULATION MODERNIZING DIALYSIS CENTERS

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) today released a final rule that will modernize the Medicare conditions for coverage for the nation’s dialysis centers and promote higher quality of care for patients receiving dialysis.

The final regulation will enhance the quality of care available to more than 336,000 Medicare beneficiaries with End-State Renal Disease (ESRD) who receive dialysis treatment from more than 4,700 Medicare-approved renal dialysis facilities across the U.S. The regulation reflects important clinical and scientific advances in dialysis technology and standards of care practices. The regulation also updates the current requirements that were first published in 1976.

“By bringing the standards of care for dialysis patients up to date, we are improving the health and quality of life for thousands of Medicare beneficiaries,” said CMS Acting Administrator Kerry Weems. “With the new rules, people living with ESRD can be assured that they are getting the best care possible.”

The final rule went on display today at the Office of the Federal Register and will be published April 4, 2008.

These regulations will serve as minimum standards that dialysis facilities must meet in order to meet to be certified under the Medicare program. These conditions for coverage are part of the Medicare survey and certification process.

The rule focuses on the importance of patient rights, patient safety and the patient’s participation in the development of his or her own plan of care. Each facility is required to develop a quality assessment and performance improvement (QAPI) program that would track the facility’s performance in patient health outcomes. This regulation also reduces the detailed and burdensome requirements that dialysis facilities had to meet previously and provides flexibility for facilities to use their resources to meet the needs of individual patients and achieve better outcomes of care.

“This rule was designed with patient care in mind. We’ve added requirements for facilities to conduct a comprehensive assessment of the patient’s health condition when starting dialysis treatment, as well as to work with an interdisciplinary team to develop an individualized care plan for every patient,” said Barry M. Straube, M.D., CMS Chief Medical Officer and Director of CMS’ Office of Clinical Standards & Quality.

“Facilities must work with patients to achieve and maintain the best possible outcomes of care,” Straube said. “We’ve also added important protections to assure that all facilities develop a quality improvement system that helps them better assess patient outcomes and make positive changes that will improve health care delivery.”

Beneficiaries will benefit by the following updates in the rule:

· Adopts updated Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC) guidelines for hemodialysis facilities to increase patient infection control procedures.
· Adopts updated American Association for Medical Instrumentation (AAMI) water quality guidelines to promote safer water for dialysis use.
· Requires defibrillators in every dialysis facility, to allow facility staff to respond rapidly to individuals that may be having a heart attack.
· Incorporates sections of the 2000 Life Safety Code, which upgrades fire safety standards.
· Expands patient rights protections, including:
o A requirement to inform beneficiaries of their right to have advance directives,
o A facility-level grievance process that explains how a facility must respond to a patient’s grievance, and
o A policy that provides a 30-day written notice to the patient before a facility can involuntarily discharge a patient.
· Requires a comprehensive patient assessment based on current medical practices and the patient’s unique needs.
· Requires a personalized patient plan of care, based on current standards of care
· A facility-level quality assurance and performance improvement (QAPI) program to demonstrate how the facility will improve the quality of care it provides to patients.
· Minimum qualifications and training requirements for patient care technicians.
· Increases Medical Director involvement in the outcomes of the QAPI program and involuntary transfers or discharges.

The final rule meets CMS’s overall goal of protecting patient safety, enhancing ongoing quality improvement, and improving patients’ experience receiving dialysis services. CMS continues to work to improve the quality of health care by measuring and improving outcomes of care, educating health care providers about quality improvement opportunities, and educating beneficiaries to make good health care choices.

The final rule is displayed at: http://www.cms.hhs.gov/CFCsAndCoPs/13_ESRD.asp#TopOfPage