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On December 7, 2010, CHEP Lexington Medical Center faced a critical water supply crisis when "dirty water" was reported from faucets during a flushing operation by West Columbia Water. Immediate action included activating the Incident Command and distributing bottled water to patient care areas. Staff concerns about clean water for coffee and sterilization led to heightened demand for resources. The situation evolved rapidly, prompting a reevaluation of water supply protocols, resulting in improved emergency preparedness and supplier coordination.
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Accessing Your Local Resources Mark Chretien, CHEP Lexington Medical Center
Situation: • Date; December 7, 2010 • Time; 22:30 • Nursing Supervisor reports “Dirty Water” coming out of the faucets • West Columbia Water is flushing hydrants on & around the campus • 22:49- West Columbia Water employee recommends, “Boil Water Advisory,”
Response: • 22:51- Incident Command activated • 23:00- Began distributing 25 cases of bottled water to “patient care areas” • 00:00- W Cola Water employee updates IC (min 24 hrs until samples can be read) • 00:15- Telephoned all water vendors with MOA’s • Turned off water to all water fountains & sinks • 00:24- “Disaster Informational Alert Message” sent out
Current concerns: • Staff hording water for coffee • Staff raided Central Supply for “Sterile Water” (to make coffee) • 00:30- Open Lex-Lex OR for sterilization needs • 01:00- 50+/- OR instrument trays need sterilization, (Palmetto Health Richland) • Sunset Café boiling water for staff use
03:00 Situation update: • 03:15- Requested 50 cases of bottled water & 35-1 gallon jugs from Wal-Mart • Notified AllSurgeons on the situation
NOW IT GETS INTERESTING… • 05:45- Dramatic increase in demand for water
NOW IT GETS INTERESTING… • 05:45- Dramatic increase in demand for water • 06:00- Additional 250 cases of bottled water requested from Wal-Mart
NOW IT GETS INTERESTING… • 05:45- Dramatic increase in demand for water • 06:00- Additional 250 cases of bottled water requested from Wal-Mart • Contacted Lexington County Emergency Management (LCEM)
Water, Water, get your water here… • 06:45- 65 cases of bottled water available from LCEM • MMRS in Columbia had 100 cases of bottled water • State of SC 16 pallets of bottled water (each pallet contains 72 cases of bottled water; = 27,648 bottles)
Then the “BAD NEWS”… • 08:30- “Boiled Water Advisory” cancelled ???
Summery… • Total time under advisory: 09:30 hours • Distributed: • 47.5 cases of bottled water • 2-5 gallon jugs • 35-1 gallon jugs • Available within 3-5 hours: • 1817 cases of bottled water • 50-5 gallon jugs • 100-1 gallon bottles
Follow-up… • De-Briefed the event • Revised our “Water Failure Plan” “Low Pressure” “Boil Water Advisory” “Water Supply Failure” • Involved multiple departments in determining potable water needs • Re-evaluated expected potable water needs
Follow-up continued… • Developed forms & templates • Defined procedures for requests & distribution • Educate staff • Increased par levels of bottled water • Determine water needed for flushing only per 24 hr period • Evaluated our options; drilling, storing, alternate supply lines
Water Distributed • 24 cases from Nutritional Services stock • 2-5 gallon water cooler jugs • 23.5 cases of bottled water an 35-1 gallon bottles from Wal-Mart
Water Available • Wal-Mart had additional 500 cases & 100- 1 gallon jugs • State of SC 16 pallets of bottled water (each pallet contains 72 cases of bottled water)
DON’T ASSUME
Questions? • Thank you; Mark Chretien