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APBNEWS.COM > SAFETY CENTER > SPECIAL REPORT
APB SPECIAL REPORT: Y2K
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If You Call 911, Will Anyone Answer?
How Y2K May Affect Emergency Medical Services and Hospitals

Dec. 20, 1999

By Joan Lippert

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full coverage

NEW YORK (APBnews.com) -- For more than a year, hospital workers nationwide have been bracing for one single night: New Year's Eve 1999.

Just as millennium watchers fear that Y2K glitches will crash computers, traffic control systems, telephone service and medical devices, emergency rooms expect a larger-than-normal spike in admissions of injured carousers, and maternity wards anticipate a stampede of couples vying to be the proud parents of the first baby of the millennium.

Maternity wards, at least, are off the hook. Maybe the pressure was too much, but most of the couples trying to conceive on April 10 (the date that gives a woman the best odds of giving birth on Jan. 1) were disappointed.

While it remains to be seen just how wild the parties are, people with life-threatening or chronic medical conditions are concerned about whether 911 services will be operational, medical records will be accessible and doctors and specialists will be available. Here's what the experts say.

911: Could be dicey in some areas

If you dial 911,"someone will answer," pledged Mark Adams of the National Emergency Number Association (NENA) in an interview with APBnews.com.

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Y2K Questions and Answers

Just last month, a White House report on White House report on Y2K preparedness warned that only half of America's 911 call centers had confirmed that they were ready. But a survey from NENA indicates that more than 98.5 percent of the centers say their equipment is now Y2K compliant, which means they can continue to provide enhanced services -- like pinpointing where a person is calling from -- once the date changes.

"Sometimes there is a reluctance just to fill out another survey,'' said Adams. In other cases, centers didn't complete their Y2K compliance efforts until the second half of the year.

Centers that did not report being Y2K ready may not have fully fixed problems with "a piece of recording equipment or a mapping program that's helpful but not necessary,'' said Adams. In those instances, callers may have to tell the operator their address instead of the computer immediately spotting it.

Public safety officials say the 911 problems that could arise over the New Year's weekend may have nothing to do with computer or phone systems. Rather, they may result from people wanting to test the emergency system or too many people picking up their phones to make calls at once.

"What everyone is concerned about is that people continue to use 911 responsibly, realizing that it's for true emergencies,'' Adams said.

Ambulances thoroughly vetted

Ambulance services have combed their systems for weaknesses from top to bottom. "We've checked out everything from communications and ambulance equipment to lighting," said Steve Haracznak, executive vice president of the American Ambulance Association (AAA) in Washington.

"For us, the biggest thing was that many of our ambulances had to get new radio systems," said Haracznak, whose organization represents independent ambulance corps. An October 1999 survey by AAA suggested that 86 percent to 90 percent of its members expect to be Y2K-compliant by the end of the year.

"Whether the traffic control and telephone systems that ambulance services rely on are running smoothly will be another story," Haracznak said.

Patient care is foremost, hospitals say

Most organizations have concentrated their efforts in the area of patient care, said Maureen Mudron, Washington counsel for the Chicago-based American Hospital Association (AHA). An AHA survey indicates that eight out of 10 hospitals will have all their Y2K solutions in place by the end of the year.

"We worked with manufacturers to upgrade [medical] devices and even discarded some," said Dwight Angell, a spokesman for Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.

"In the last two weeks, New Jersey hospitals were among a number across the country that did successful dry runs by simulating a Y2K scenario, forcing the calendar," said Ron Czajkowski, spokesman for the New Jersey Hospital Association, based in Princeton. "Everything from fetal monitors and diagnostic systems to lights and air conditioning and elevators has been checked."

Hospitals may still use some medical devices that are not Y2K compliant, Mudron said. "An EKG, for example, will continue to give a correct read, but it will show an incorrect date on which test was being run, since the equipment operates independently of what day it is," she said.

"Most hospitals have already tested systems that might affect patient registration," Czajkowski said. However, a Y2K status report from the President's Council anticipates annoying glitches, and warns that some health-care providers and medical organizations "exhibit troubling levels of readiness," which could cause headaches with billing systems and patient records.

Keep documents handy

Related Links:

Consumer Information on Y2K

Food and Drug Administration/Y2K and FDA

Food and Drug Administration/Y2K Biomedical Clearinghouse

President's Council on Year 2000 Conversion/Health Info

In the event of a computer failure or glitch, it's important to keep your insurance card easily accessible. It contains crucial information to help if there are admissions problems, or any questions about your enrollment, suggested Fred Brown, chairman and Y2K spokesman for the AHA. And to be on the safe side, he said, keep records of insurance claims and lists of medications handy.

Most doctors still use paper medical records; even if yours has switched to computerized records, paper copies are probably on file as a backup.

But it's always a good idea to be able to provide emergency and other medical personnel pertinent facts about your medical history -- such as drug allergies, medical conditions, past treatments and operations, medical devices you use, your doctor's phone number and the number of an emergency contact -- so gather these now, Brown stressed.

People are 'ultimate contingency plan'

"People are the ultimate contingency plan," Mudron said. "It's people who have always been present to deliver the care, and we encourage hospitals to have staff there and be prepared for whatever might need to happen."

Medical personnel point out that they handle emergencies every day. Doctors even operate right through hurricanes, using battery-operated lights if they have to. They know how to treat people without the help of computer-operated gadgets.

Henry Ford Hospital is a case in point. "We have two or three emergency drills a year -- for example, our chemical contamination drill. We're a large urban hospital and we have plans for everything," Angell said.

Joan Lippert is an APBnews.com correspondent in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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