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Friday, April 19, 2024

State has new Emergency Response tool

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Today the Indiana State Department of Health hosted the last of three trainings at Decatur High School in Indianapolis, to prepare emergency responders on how to set up and utilize the Stateā€™s most recently acquired resource for responding to disasters and other emergenciesā€”a mobile hospital unit.Ā 

The mobile hospital unit consists of three, 26 ft. trailers, each containing two structures with generators, HVAC systems and basic hospital equipment. The three trailers, which can be deployed separately or together as one large unit, can accommodate up to 50 patients.

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ā€œWhen a natural disaster strikes, access to medical care is often in desperate need, but short supply due to things like lack of transportation, power outages and hospitals being overwhelmed,ā€ said State Health Commissioner William VanNess, M.D. ā€œThe mobile hospital unit can be deployed to support local healthcare personnel and emergency responders when and where itā€™s most needed.ā€

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The mobile hospital unit is a multi-purpose structure that can also be used as a vaccine clinic, triage site, and casualty collection point among other things.Ā 

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ā€œThe mobile hospital unit is a much needed resource that will help ensure Hoosiers get the information and care they need during an emergency,ā€ said Lee Christensen, Director of Public Health Preparedness and Emergency Response at the State Health Department. ā€œThese units would have come in handy during the 2008 floods, the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, or following the tornadoes that hit the southern part of the state in 2012. Unfortunately, we know there will be a time when a resource like this will be needed again and we want to be sure they will be utilized to the greatest extent possible.ā€

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In addition to practicing the set up and tear down of the structures, the trainings aimed to strengthen the State Health Departmentā€™s relationships with local volunteers, educate volunteers about all other emergency response resources available, and generate interest among the Stateā€™s Medical Reserve Corps (MRC). MRC volunteers are registered through the State Emergency Registry of Volunteers for Indiana (SERV-IN) an electronic registration system and database of local, regional and statewide volunteer programs.

To learn more about SERV-IN, visit https://www.serv-in.org/.

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