Published January 1, 2015
| Version v1
Journal article
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If the Worst Happens: Five Strategies for Developing and Leveraging Information Technology-Enabled Disaster Response in Healthcare
Description
Abstract—Natural disasters, such as hurricanes, tornadoes, cyclones,
earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, wildfires, and floods, have
a profound impact on healthcare by limiting healthcare providers'
ability to effectively provide patient care in the affected areas and
respond to myriad healthcare needs of the affected population. The
situation can potentially be exacerbated if healthcare providers do
not have effective mechanisms in place for disaster response. The
response to Hurricane Katrina, a Category 3 hurricane that made
landfall in August 2005 and affected several states in the southwestern
U.S., was a vivid example of how the lack of effective
planning and responsiveness can affect healthcare services. In this
paper, based on an extensive case study, which included a rigorous
examination of the Veterans Health Administration's information
technology (IT) infrastructure and its response to Hurricane Katrina,
we present five strategies that healthcare organizations can
undertake to develop and leverage IT-enabled disaster response.
These include the development of: 1) an integrated IT architecture;
2) a universal data repository; 3) web-based disaster communication
and coordination; 4) an IT-enabled disaster support system;
and 5) standardized and integrated IT-enabled disaster response
processes. We discuss how these strategies can help healthcare
providers manage continuity and offer quality healthcare during
natural disasters.
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