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HDSCS News Notes

Recent activities of the Hospital Disaster Support Communications System

Emergency Responses

Emergency Activation #102: At 9:35 AM on February 1, 2008, April Moell WA6OPS received a cell phone call from the Disaster/Safety Coordinator for Saddleback Memorial hospitals at Laguna and San Clemente. A telephone switch failure had occurred at the San Clemente facility, rendering half of the outgoing circuits inoperable and the other half subject to overload. April activated Core Team responders John and Corky Walker, AC7GK and KG6YWY, who arrived at the hospital in less than 25 minutes. John set up and operated his portable station at the hospital Command Center, while Corky became a radio "shadow" for the House Supervisor. Meanwhile, Dave West KI6EPI was activated to the Laguna facility to set up a backup link. April served as outside base station to make phone calls as needed. Circuits were repaired by 11:10 AM, after which our members remained on site for a half hour to make sure that the communications systems were stable.

Ken Simpson W6KOS at Chapman HospitalEmergency Activation #101: At 9 AM on Sunday, October 21, 2007, HDSCS was paged by the Orange County EMS Communications Center. A power failure had occurred at Chapman Medical Center in Orange and there were intermittent problems with the generator. External telephone communications had completely failed and internal phones were intermittent. A HDSCS net was activated and Ken Simpson W6KOS immediately went to the hospital, arriving in about 25 minutes (photo at right). Following soon after were Dale Petes KI6ANS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR and Dave West KI6EPI. To provide internal communications, they deployed to the Emergency Department, Intensive Care Unit, a medical-surgical unit and a sub-acute care unit. April Moell WA6OPS and Tom Gaccione WB2LRH made calls to line up additional operators to relieve the first responders if needed. Telephone technicians arrived to fix the phones at about 10:30 AM and the lines were working again about 40 minutes after that. HDSCS operators remained on the units until 11:45 AM to make sure that the system was stable before securing operations. Cheryl Simpson KD6MWZ was the primary net control and outside base station during this event.

Emergency Activation #100: Shortly after 8 PM on July 11, 2007, Assistant Coordinator Jim McLaughlin AB6UF received a cell phone call from the House Supervisor at Tustin Hospital Medical Center. Power had gone down, all phones were down, and the hospital's ReddiNet* terminal was not functional. It was believed that a nearby power transformer had failed. Jim immediately contacted April Moell WA6OPS and put his base station on the air to coordinate the responding operators. Jim alerted the county's ReddiNet Central Point of the hospital's problem and advised how the Central Point could contact HDSCS for message relay into the facility. Meanwhile, April and her husband Joe KØOV were contacting HDSCS members on the "First Wave" callup sheet. Within 26 minutes of the hospital's call, two HDSCS communicators were on site and connecting to the hospital's rooftop antenna (see photo at left of antenna installation four weeks earlier). They were Allen Bullock KD6LCL and Dave Mofford W7KTS. A third operator, Bill Hegardt K6WIL, was coming in the door at that moment, too. Fortunately, power was restored and phones were back on line within a few minutes. Three additional operators, already on the way, were called off. The three operators on site went into our standard 30 minute "holding pattern" to make certain that phones were remaining up. Although this was not a major activation, it served as an excellent "scramble drill." Our rapid response showed the benefits of the prior meetings and drills with this hospital and all the others in the county. Hospital staff members on duty knew that HDSCS exists and they knew how to contact us. Our plan for activating operators led to a rapid response, not only because we had identified the members living closest to that facility, but also because these members had their portable radio gear at the ready.

Clay Stearns KE6TZR installs antennaEmergency Activation #99: On March 21, 2007, the Telecommunications Supervisor at an Orange County trauma center alerted HDSCS by group page of a telephone failure. Our attempts to call into the hospital were met with rapid busy signals, confirming the problem. For the next hour, HDSCS Coordinators made calls to members to activate communicators to the facility. Within an hour, two HDSCS responders were on site and three more were about to enter the facility's driveway. At that point, the hospital Incident Commander declared the situation to be stable and released the communicators. Responders were Galel Fajardo KB6MOH, David Mofford W7KTS, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Corky Walker KG6YWY and John Walker AC7GK. Net Control was April Moell WA6OPS.

Emergency Activation #98: Telephones at Saddleback Hospital in San Clemente became unstable during the morning of March 20, 2007. Hospital staff used the HDSCS call-up list to contact Jim Riedel K6EEE via cell phone. Jim alerted April Moell WA6OPS and proceeded to the hospital with his go-kit. April served as Net Control and contacted the Orange County Communications Center to advise that if hospitals, fire departments or others were unable to contact the hospital, they could call April for radio message relay into the facility. The Safety Director at a sister Saddleback hospital in Laguna Hills decided that it would be good to have an operator at his facility to have a back-up for contacting San Clemente. John Walker AC7GK, with his equipment at the ready, was activated to Laguna Hills. Phones at San Clemente were repaired not long after our operators arrived, but the hams stayed on location and maintained contact until it was determined that the entire system was stable under load.

Emergency Activation #97: Although HDSCS has developed an excellent alerting system so that hospitals can quickly initiate calls for ham help, sometimes our activations take place because of "heads-up ball playing" by our members. Such was the case on February 13, 2007 at about 11:15 AM, when April Moell WA6OPS visited a store in Buena Park and was told that credit card transactions could not be processed because phone service was out. When she learned that phones were also down in adjacent stores, she decided to check on the closest hospital, which was Anaheim General's Buena Park campus (AGBP). Sure enough, the 31-bed facility was experiencing intermittent failures of incoming and outgoing calls. Paul Broden K6MHD was monitoring the main HDSCS two-meter repeater and immediately headed for AGBP. Jon Schaffer W6UFS was also listening and he hastened to Anaheim General's main campus in Anaheim to provide a direct radio link between the two facilities. Besides serving as a base station contact for Paul and Jon, it was April who made contact with OC-EMS, local authorities and the phone company to expedite the repair of phone problems. Operations were secured at 5 PM when it was determined that phone service was adequate for the low-traffic evening and night hours. Plans were made to resume ham communications for these two hospitals at 9 AM the following day during repairs (see Standbys #85-87 below).

Broken water main hinders repair of cut phone cablesEmergency Activation #96: At 8:20 AM on September 10, 2006, April Moell WA6OPS was alerted by the Orange County Communications Central Point that Chapman Medical Center was on internal diversion status due to a telephone failure. OC Communications had received this information by ReddiNet* and calls to the hospital were unanswered. April immediately began dispatching HDSCS members to that 114-bed facility in the city of Orange. Light Sunday morning traffic aided our quick response. First to arrive at 8:42 was Ken Simpson W6KOS, who found that all internal telephone extensions were inactive. Only one non-PBX line to the outside was working. He began Amateur Radio communications to the outside immediately. Additional operators soon arrived and were deployed to critical areas such the Emergency Department and the Medical/Surgical patient unit. Fortunately, the hospital's telephone technician arrived quickly and was able to diagnose and fix the switching system problem in relatively short order. Phones were fully back up at 10 AM and HDSCS operations secured following our usual 30 minute hold after that. In addition to Ken Simpson, here is an alphabetical list of the responding hams: Paul Broden K6MHD, Joe Moell KØOV, Jon Schaffer W6UFS and Clay Stearns KE6TZR. Three other members were on standby and ready to respond when the all-clear was given. April Moell WA6OPS was the outside base station contact.

April Moell controls emergency net from carEmergency Activation #95: During construction along Main Street in the city of Orange, fiber optic cables were accidentally severed on the afternoon of 17 August 2006. This caused failure of most of the trunk lines for Childrens Hospital of Orange County (CHOC). The break also affected external tie lines to several hospital units and clinics. April Moell was notified of the outage and the "internal disaster" declared by CHOC's Director of Safety and Security. April dispatched eleven HDSCS members to the hospital to cover critical areas such as the Command Post, switchboard (PBX), Neonatal Intensive Care (NICI), Pediatric Intensive Care (PICU) and medical/surgical units. Early reports indicated that it would take the phone company about six hours to repair the fiber optics, but Murphy's Law was in effect. In working on the cables, construction equipment broke into a water main, flooding the ditch and delaying fiber repairs for most of the night (photo above right). There were further delays when some telecom circuit cards failed during reinstallation the next morning. In rotating shifts of four to ten hours each, our HDSCS support continued, utilizing three Amateur Radio repeaters and two UHF simplex frequencies to handle logistics as well as internal and external medical communications. Examples included alerting San Bernardino County hospitals of the need to use Amateur Radio to contact CHOC for patient transfers, relaying the nurse's report on a patient being transferred, and contacting a physician for patient medication instructions. After 22-1/2 hours, all voice phones and most data/FAX lines were restored and our operators were released. These 20 hams responded to CHOC (in alphabetical order): Paul Broden K6MHD, Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, Louie DeArman K6SM, Galel Fajardo KB6MOH, Reid Green KF6LOK, Jack Hafner KO6IC, Tom Hall N6DGK, Fred Lochner WA6FRA, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, Joe Moell KØOV, David Mofford W7KTS, Heiko Peschel AD6OI, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Ray Rittenhouse KF6WZN, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Jon Schaffer W6UFS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Fred Wagner KQ6Q, Dave West KI6EPI and Woody Woodward KJ6LE. Providing base station and landline telephone support from home were April Moell WA6OPS, Joe Moell KØOV, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF and Susan Hafner KD6YMH.

Emergency Activation #94: At half past noon on March 21, 2006, David Mofford W7KTS was called by the Disaster/Safety Coordinator at Tustin Hospital and Medical Center (THMC). Internal and external landline telephone connections at the hospital were intermittent at that time and they failed completely soon thereafter. David, who was on THMC's pre-established Call-up List, followed established procedures by contacting a Coordinator before he set out for the facility himself. He arrived just over 15 minutes after receiving the hospital's call and immediately set up to provide external communications. Other HDSCS members soon arrived at the hospital and were stationed at the administration's Command Post, the Emergency Department, Pediatrics, and medical units. One operator "shadowed" the THMC Disaster/Safety Coordinator. A defective power supply was replaced, the telephone system was re-booted, and normal communications were restored shortly before 4:30 PM. Besides W7KTS, the following members responded to THMC: Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Bob Evans W9TQC, Bill Hegardt K6WIL, Pete Holm KF6HVW, Fred Lochner WA6FRA, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Corky Walker KG6YWY and John Walker AC7GK. Assisting these responders were April Moell WA6OPS (shown at left), Joe Moell KØOV and Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, who made activation calls and served as outside contacts.

HBH Flu Drill
The Human Resources Department at Huntington Beach Hospital created this poster as a thank-you to David West, the HBH Disaster/Safety Coordinator (at left) for his work in organizing the special Avian Flu drill (see Drill #147 below). In front of the Eyewitness News truck in their blue HDSCS vests are Allen Bullock KD6LCL and David Mofford W7KTS, who were part of our response team to HBH that day.

Alerts, Drills and Standby Operations

Standby #92: A 12-hour standby operation at Irvine Medical Center on January 18 kicked off HDSCS communications activities for 2008 An old telephone system was being replaced and circuits for a new building were being added. This necessitated a total telephone outage, followed by intermittent partial outages for several hours. Work began at 10 PM Friday and was not fully completed until 9:30 AM Saturday. According to John Walker AC7GK, who was one of the Command Center operators, "We handled a lot of message traffic. In my log, I have calls to Security, to Housekeeping, a request for a Respiratory Therapist, and coordination of admissions. All the while, we were keeping staff informed of the progress of the phone work and advising technicians of problems in restored phone banks. Everyone performed smoothly and efficiently. The radio contacts were concise and professional." Other communicators in the hospital were Galel Fajardo KB6MOH, Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Tom Hall N6DGK, Bill Hegardt K6WIL, Mark Kern KE6QXF, Scott Lolmaugh WD8ICK, Jon Schaffer W6UFS, Corky Walker KF6LOK and Larry Zysman N6BNM. Taking shifts as HDSCS base stations, available to make calls to any outside location, were Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, April Moell WA6OPS, Ralph Swanson WB6JBI, Ken Simson W6KOS.

Standby #91: An area-wide power failure affected portions of San Clemente beginning about 9:30 PM on Christmas Eve 2007. Jim Riedel K6EEE immediately went to check on the Saddleback Hospital building in that city. Fortunately, the power failure did not affect internal/external telephones. Jim remained on site, in radio communication with Assistant Coordinator Tom Gaccione WB2LRH. They notified the county's Emergency Medical Services Central Point of the situation. Power was restored at 10:53 PM and Jim remained on site until 11:35 PM.

Golden Guardian drillDrill #157: Golden Guardian, a statewide homeland security and disaster preparedness exercise, is the largest of its kind in the nation. It is intended to improve coordination of governments at all levels, volunteer organizations and the private sector for response to manmade and natural emergencies. Orange County hospitals and agencies held a major Golden Guardian exercise on November 14, 2007, and HDSCS played an important part. A mock explosion took place at Angel Stadium just before 10 AM (photo at left by WB2LRH), with about 300 volunteer "victims" either at that site or pre-staged at the participating hospitals. HDSCS members were dispatched to the Orange County Emergency Medical Services (OC-EMS) Departmental Operations Center, the OC Emergency Operations Center (EOC) at Loma Ridge, and 15 hospitals, including 3 trauma centers. We also provided drill coordination support to EMS officials at the explosion site. As usual, we insisted that each hospital follow its pre-established activation procedures, to insure that they will be familiar with them in the next actual emergency. Our members practiced rapid response and equipment setup in each hospital. Working shoulder-to-shoulder with hospital personnel, we passed requests for ventilators and other equipment, as well as calls for additional medical staff. We also handled patient messages, such as coordinating the transport of a burn victim to a special treatment facility. Supporting EMS personnel were Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF and Ken Simpson W6KOS. Responding to the hospitals were Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, Louie DeArman K6SM, Kim DeCelles K9KIM, Tom Hall N6DGK, Bill Hegardt K6WIL, Roman Kamienski KG6QMZ, Bob McCord K6IWA, Dave Mofford W7KTS, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Jim Riedel K6EEE, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Matt Stofle W7MWS, Alex Valdez K9BLK, Fred Wagner KQ6Q, Corky Walker KG6YWY, John Walker AC7GK, Al Way KC6LNP and Woody Woodward KJ6LE. Net Controls and base stations were April Moell WA6OPS and Ralph Swanson WB6JBI.

Santiago wildfireHDSCS was on high alert as the Santiago Wildfire threatened homes and facilities in eastern Orange County. The arson-caused blaze, which began about 6 PM on Sunday, October 21, 2007, consumed over 27,000 acres. The point of origin was approximately two miles from the hilltop Orange County Emergency Operations Center (OC-EOC), which houses the ReddiNet* Central Point. At 6:30 PM Sunday, HDSCS activated a two-meter net and sent Jon Schaffer W6UFS to the OC-EOC. This was to insure that backup communications would be available there, even if roads became impassible. Shortly thereafter, Allen Bullock KD6LCL was deployed to the OC Heathcare Agency's Strategic Operations Center. W6UFS was later relieved by Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, who remained at OC-EOC until 6 AM Monday. During that time, HDSCS monitored the status of all nearby hospitals, including Chapman Medical Center, Tustin Hospital, Irvine Regional Medical Center, Western Medical Center of Santa Ana and Saddleback Hospital of Laguna Hills. With the immediate threat to the OC-EOC relieved and hospitals not requiring on-site support, HDSCS moved on Monday morning to a high-alert status with constant but informal net presence, as well as checks on potentially affected hospitals as appropriate. Members also used this net to keep Coordinators apprised of their availability for immediate deployment if conditions change. The formal net was discontinued on Wednesday evening and the Statewide Medical Exercise took place as planned on Thursday (see next item). Net Control stations for the fire alert included April Moell WA6OPS, Joe Moell KØOV, Jackie Schaffer WA6AKP, Cheryl Simpson KD6MWZ, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Dave West KI6EPI and Woody Woodward KJ6LE. (Photo by Orange County Supervisor Bill Campbell)

Drill #156: Amid southern California wildfires, the annual California Statewide Medical and Health Disaster Exercise took place on October 25, 2007. Although accreditation requirements call for every hospital to drill at least twice annually, most Orange County hospitals opted out of this drill because of wildfire activity and their upcoming participation in a much larger county exercise that is scheduled in November. Only 4 HDSCS-supported hospitals were in the statewide drill this time, compared to 17 in the previous year. Hospitals were encouraged to test their surge capacity plans and drill throughout the day, to practice change-of-shift procedures. Our involvement began at 7 AM and ended at 4 PM. Hospitals originated messages appropriate for their drill scenarios and practiced new Hospital Incident Command System (HICS) procedures. Communicators at the hospitals were Bill Hegart K6WIL, Bob McCord K6IWA, Jim Riedel K6EEE, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Corky Walker KG6YWY, John Walker AC7GK and Woody Woodward KJ6LE. April Moell WA6OPS and Ken Simpson W6KOS served as outside base stations and net controls.

Drill #155: HDSCS was a major player in the yearly Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Services (RACES) drill for Orange County that took place on Saturday, October 6, 2007. The scenario was a historic rainstorm that caused flooding in the county and the eventual failure of Prado Dam. Our goal was to pass simulated messages between each of our 34 hospitals and their local municipalities as represented by city and county RACES organizations, in accordance with our Memorandum of Understanding. Also included were typical messages that would be relayed for the Orange County Emergency Medical Services' Agency Operations Center (EMS-AOC) and the EMS dispatch Central Point. We also exchanged messages with Orange County Red Cross. Over 50 messages were originated by HDSCS in the two-hour drill. There were also many replies to these messages handled, as well as message traffic for us that was originated by the RACES groups. Many of these messages were relayed on two HDSCS nets, a main net and a special net for south OC. These nets were busy non-stop! Other messages were passed via various city/county RACES repeaters and simplex frequencies. HDSCS Net Control operators were April and Joe Moell, WA6OPS and KØOV. Other participating HDSCS members were Paul Broden K6MHD, Kim DeCelles K9KIM, Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Tom Hall N6DGK, Fred Lochner WA6FRA, Scott Lolmaugh WD8ICK, Bob McCord K6IWA, David Mofford W7KTS, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Jim Riedel K6EEE, Jackie Schaffer WA6AKP, Jon Schaffer W6UFS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Matthew Stofle W7MWS, Alex Valdez K9BLK, Fred Wagner KQ6Q, Corky Walker KG6YWY, John Walker AC7GK and Dave West KI6EPI.

Scott Stys KG6LJY at St. Jude PBXDrill #154: On the weekend of September 15 - 16, 2007, HDSCS members participated in a Volunteer Mutual Aid Drill (VMAD) at the Orange County Sheriff's Laser Village training facility. Learning modules were presented, followed by simulated scenarios. Communicators from local CERT groups, RACES, and Red Cross took part. Saturday's participants were Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Kim DeCelles K9KIM and Clay Stearns KE6TZR. Galel Fajardo, Sr. KB6MOH, Galel Fajardo, Jr. KD6AYP and Larry Woolf KF6YCM were there on Sunday.

Standby #90: HDSCS operators took their go-kits to Huntington Beach Hospital on June 9, 2007 while workers relocated a 200-pair telephone cable as part of a construction project. For almost three hours, all phones were out in the Laboratory, Radiology and Operating suites. The hams passed medical messages into and out of these critical areas, including laboratory results and requests for blood draws. At the hospital were Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Scott Lolmaugh WD8ICK, Matthew Stofle KI6BLY and Dave West KI6EPI. Outside base stations were David Mofford W7KTS and Ralph Swanson WB6JBI.

Drill #153: HDSCS was a major player in an Urban Area Strategic Initiative (UASI) drill on June 6, 2007. On that Wednesday morning, 27 HDSCS communicators took positions at command posts, base stations and in a special place called the "SimCell." We were simulating relief operators on the sixth day of a bioterrorism event. Although the 3-1/2 hour drill was part of a UASI grant to the cities of Santa Ana and Anaheim, 18 hospitals in nine cities of northern and central Orange County participated. This was realistic because Orange County Emergency Medical Services agency would coordinate these hospitals for transfer of patients and obtaining additional supplies in an actual emergency of this type. The outside consultant firm that scripted this drill obtained a special offsite location with staff to make phone calls into hospital command posts during the drill, simulating various departments and outside entities. The OC-EMS Departmental Operations Center (DOC) was also activated, communicating via telephone, 800 MHz county government radio, digital ReddiNet and Amateur Radio. HDSCS communicators were in the hospital command posts, at home base stations, and in the SimCell. Several new HDSCS members received valuable training in this drill. About half of our communicators took time off from work to participate in this important exercise. Assisting at the SimCell were Jim McLaughlin AB6UF and Jim Riedel K6EEE. At hospitals were Paul Broden K6MHD, Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, Louie DeArman K6SM, Kim Decelles K9KIM, Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Bill Hegardt K6WIL, Ted Kramer NB6N, Fred Lochner WA6FRA, Bob McCord K6IWA, David Mofford W7KTS, Jackie Schaffer WA6AKP, Jon Schaffer W6UFS, Mike Slygh KI6IRA, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Scott Stys KG6LJY, Alex Valdez K9BLK, Fred Wagner KQ6Q, Corky Walker KG6YWY, John Walker AC7GK, Al Way KC6LNP and Dave West KI6EPI. Providing communications support at the EMS DOC was Ken Simpson W6KOS. April Moell WA6OPS was HDSCS Net Control, assisted by Ralph Swanson WB6JBI at his base station.

Standby #89: It was a record-length standby operation for HDSCS on April 20 and 21, 2007 as members stayed ready for backup communications during major work by Edison on the power distribution system at Childrens Hospital of Orange County. A wing of the facility where the telephone switching equipment is located was without commercial power for almost 27 hours. CHOC requested that HDSCS keep communicators on site Friday evening, overnight, and through Saturday until evening in case problems developed with the phone system while it was on emergency power. Sixteen HDSCS members participated in the operation, maintaining communicators on site linked with base stations through the outage. At the hospital were Paul Broden K6MHD, Bob Evans W9TQC, Mark Kern KE6QXF, Bruce Lent K6HRU, Scott Lolmaugh WK8ICK, Heiko Peschel AD6OI, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Alex Valdez KG6WKK, John Walker AC7GK and Dave West KI6EPI. Handling base station duties were Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, April Moell WA6OPS, Joe Moell KØOV, Dave Mofford W7KTS and Cheryl Simpson KD6MWZ.

Fred Lochner WA6FRA in the Healthcare Agency emergency command trailerStandby #88: HDSCS member Al Way KC6LNP was on standby at Saddleback Hospital in San Clemente hospital on the evening of April 19, 2007 during relocation of the trunk lines in the telephone switch. He was linked with base station Jim McLaughlin AB6UF during the work, ready to call for additional operators if something had gone wrong. Several additional members in central and southern Orange County were ready to respond if they had been needed.

Standbys #85, #86 and #87: HDSCS members provided backup communications during critical hours for three days as telephone problems were diagnosed and repaired following the area-wide outage of February 13, 2007 (see Activation #97 above). Some non-functional trunk lines were found at both the Anaheim and Buena Park campuses of Anaheim General Hospital. Our communicators were stationed at both facilities on February 14, 15 and 16 (20 hours total) to provide a direct link. They were Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Louie DeArman K6SM, Reid Green KF6LOK, Fred Lochner WA6FRA, David Mofford W7KTS, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Ken Simpson W6KOS and Fred Wagner KQ6Q. Providing outside base station support were Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, April Moell WA6OPS, Jackie Schaffer WA6AKP, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Ralph Swanson WB6JBI and Dave West KI6EPI.

Drill #152: HDSCS participated in a two-hospital drill in southern Orange County on the morning of January 18, 2007. The Saddleback Memorial Medical Centers in San Clemente and Laguna Hills enacted a security-related scenario. This was a good opportunity for us to explain how we would be utilized in an actual emergency of this nature, and to participate in the debriefing afterward. We also tested some alternate communication paths for the southern region of the county. Participants were Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, David Mofford W7KTS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Corky Walker KG6YWY and John Walker AC7GK.

Decontamination drill at an OC hospitalStandby #84: Beginning in the late evening of November 17, 2006, HDSCS communicators were set up at St. Jude Hospital in Fullerton while maintenance was done to the hospital's phone system computer. All landline phones had to be taken down during this work. Staff members knew that it would be prudent to ask for HDSCS to be on location to provide rapid communication between critical units of the facility. Our being there gives them confidence to go about normal activities, not worrying about communications issues. They learn how hams can supplement their communications, and when they see HDSCS on site in the wee hours, they can believe that we will respond to unexpected communications failures, too. This time, the phone maintenance went smoothly and our presence was needed for only about three hours. Participants at the hospital were Paul Broden K6MHD, Jack Hafner KO6IC, Craig Johnson NØCCJ, Dave Mofford W7KTS, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Cheryl Simpson KD6MWZ, Alex Valdez KG6WKK and John Walker AC7GK. April Moell WA6OPS was the outside base station contact.

Drills #150 and #151: The annual California Statewide Medical and Health Disaster Exercise for 2006 took place on two days, November 15 and 16, making for two distinctly different mornings of activity for us. The California Emergency Medical Services Authority suggests scenarios, but hospitals are given great latitude in how they drill and when. Because most Orange County Hospitals have already participated in major mass casualty drills by this time of the year, many of them opt to do simple communications exercises, such as relaying bed status to Orange County Emergency Medical Services Agency (OC-EMS). A few others do tabletop exercises. The rest utilize a mix of paper patients, teddy bear patients and volunteer victims to create drill experiences that test various aspects of individual disaster plans. Half of our 34 supported hospitals used HDSCS in their exercises over the two days. HDSCS also supported the OC-EMS Department Operation Center (DOC). Two hospitals did tabletops with our hams "at the table" with them for education and advice. In addition, those hospitals initiated messages via ham radio to an out-of-area entity. Other hospitals had a mix of activity, testing various departments, simulating complete phone failures and pressuring nursing units to deal with large numbers of incoming patient transfers from outside the county. Some hospitals needed HDSCS members for unit-to-unit internal communications as well as for their link to the outside world. Numerous requests were initiated by the hospitals to obtain medicines and supplies. HDSCS relayed messages to suppliers such as Bergen Brunswig and Cardinal for pharmaceuticals and to Professional Hospital Supply for medical needs. Messages identifying the location of simulated victims were relayed to the Red Cross. With all that plus updates and status reports to OC-EMS, it made for a busy, but very realistic net. We had great "shoulder to shoulder" interaction with our hospitals as well as helping them to better understand how Amateur Radio can assist them in large and small disasters. Special thanks to Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, who operated from Orange County EMS and to Paul Broden K6MHD, who worked in tandem with April Moell WA6OPS to cover Net Control and relay messages. In the Temecula area, Dick Schmieter KM6MH performed radio relays to one of the suppliers. Other members communicating from hospitals were Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, Louie DeArman K6SM, Galel Fajardo KB6MOH, Bill Hegardt K6WIL, Tom Hall N6DGK, Ted Kramer NB6N, Dave Mofford W7KTS, Heiko Peschel AD6OI, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Jim Riedel K6EEE, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Alex Valdez KG6WKK, Bob Walker KD6VQA and Al Way KC6LNP.

Standby #83: A group of HDSCS members spent the evening of November 1, 2006 at Huntington Beach Hospital (HBH) while work was performed on a backup power supply for the telephone system. All phones had to be taken down for 70 minutes and during that time, communications were provided for critical units under the watchful eye of HBH Disaster Coordinator Dave West KI6EPI. Several messages were passed for units such as Radiology and the Emergency Department. At the hospital were Jon Schaffer W6UFS, Galel Fajardo KB6MOH, Bill Hegard K6WIL and Marshall Shipley KG6SKD. The outside base station contact was April Moell WA6OPS.

WA6OPS at base stationStandby #82: Power failed briefly during an evening thunderstorm in Huntington Beach on October 12, 2006. Assistant Communicator Tom Gaccione WB2LRH checked on Huntington Beach Hospital (HBH) via telephone and received no answer, even after power was restored. Knowing that power glitches have adversely affected the HBH phone system in the past, HDSCS initiated a callout to the facility. First to arrive, in 13 minutes, was Marshall Shipley KG6SKD. Within 15 minutes of his arrival, WB2LRH and Clay Stearns KE6TZR were on scene. Phones came back up shortly after KG6SKD arrived, so the hams did not deploy within the facility. They remained at HBH for 30 minutes, to be sure that phones were stable.

Drill #149: The annual Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Services (RACES) city/county drill for Orange County was Saturday, October 7, 2006. The emphasis of this exercise is communications with the city and county RACES groups. It is important for them to realize that we are at hospitals in their cities and to understand the types of messages that may need to pass between hospitals and local government. It's also good practice for us to QSY to the other groups' frequencies and learn about their net procedures. HDSCS handled simulated traffic to and from 35 medical facilities, along with Emergency Medical Services Agency Operations Center (EMS-AOC) and the dispatch Central Point. We set up two separate nets, one for north and one for south Orange County. At least ten city RACES groups, plus county RACES and the Red Cross initiated messages and inquiries to the HDSCS nets. It took five repeaters to handle sixty incoming and outgoing messages within the two-hour time limit. April Moell WA6OPS was HDSCS Net Control. Other HDSCS participants were Paul Broden K6MHD, Reid Green KF6LOK, Bill Hegard K6WIL, Roman Kamienski KG6QMZ, Fred Lochner WA6FRA, Jon Schaffer W6UFS, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Ralph Swanson WB6JBI, Joe Moell KØOV (at Orange County EOC), Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Galel Fajardo KB6MOH, Jim Riedel K6EEE, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Woody Woodward KJ6LE and Fred Wagner KQ6Q.

Triaged drill patient ready for transportStandby #81: HDSCS went on alert in the afternoon of September 12, 2006 when Hoag Hospital reported telephone system problems. Internal and outgoing calls were not affected, but some calls from the outside into the main switchboard were not completed or dropped out. HDSCS staged two members close to the hospital for rapid response in case the situation deteriorated, and stayed in touch with Hoag's communications staff and Disaster Coordinator for approximately two hours until the problem was repaired.

Drill #148: Saturday June 17, 2006 began with cool breezes and a marine layer that covered the Verizon Amphitheatre in Irvine. But by 9:30AM, a hot sun was shining on 65 casualties after a violent simulated earthquake. This was the start of the year's Yellow Net (south Orange County) hospital drill. Five hospitals participated in this test of infrastructure failures, walk-in victims and unannounced ambulance arrivals. The hospitals had agreed in advance to go without any landline phones, cell phones, or the ReddiNet* for hospital and EMS messaging. They could only use HEAR radios and HDSCS responders for their communications. HDSCS also simulated the loss of some voice repeaters, limiting our flexibility. We initiated a Core Team (automatic) response to the hospitals and to the county EOC immediately after the simulated shaking. Joe Moell KØOV took our portable repeater up into the Laguna hills to test its capability for providing communications among Yellow Net hospitals if the quake had taken out the fixed-site repeaters that HDSDCS normally uses. At the disaster site were Bruce Chappell KE6TSM and Tom Gaccione WB2LRH. Backing up communications at the county EOC dispatch Central Point were Galel Fajardo KB6MOH and David Mofford W7KTS. Responding to the hospitals were Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Reid Green KF6LOK, Mark Kern KE6QXF , Fred Lochner WA6FRA, Jim Riedel K6EEE, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Fred Wagner KQ6Q, Bob Walker KD6VQA, Corky Walker KG6YWY, John Walker AC7GK and Al Way KC6LNP. Dick Schmieter KM6MH in Riverside County assisted our net by finding available resources and hospital bed availability in his area. Net control and base station duties were handled by April Moell WA6OPS, Cheryl Simpson KD6MWZ, and Ralph Swanson WB6JBI.

Flu drill on KCAL-TVDrill #147: On May 18, 2006, HDSCS communicators responded to Huntington Beach Hospital (HBH) after a bus full of high school students was diverted to that facility. It was all part of a pre-planned avian flu drill in which students from Westminster High School pretended to be band members who had just returned from tour in southeast Asia, became ill, and proceeded to the hospital. HBH set up its surge capacity tents outside to provide mass treatment and reduce risk to the rest of the hospital population. HDSCS members backed up communications in the hospital's Command Post, the Emergency Department and those outside tents. HBH simulated overload in its phone system, so some patient care messages were relayed into and out of the facility via Amateur Radio. One such message was to the Epidemiology section of Orange County Public Health Agency. An incoming message involved an ambulance company that wanted to come in to pick up a patient for transfer to another facility. Several TV stations were invited to witness and report on the drill. This also presented a realistic challenge to the HBH Public Information Officer. Video of two HDSCS communicators in the Command Post was included in one of the news stories on KCAL-TV Channel 9 that day. Participating in the drill were Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, April Moell WA6OPS, Dave Mofford W7KTS, Fred Patzold WA6MOB, Ken Simpson W6KOS and Clay Stearns KE6TZR.

Drill #146: Twelve hospitals in the Blue/Green net grouping participated in a three-hour simulated earthquake drill on Thursday, May 11, 2006. HDSCS members responded to each of these hospitals, as well as the ReddiNet* Central Point at the Orange County Emergency Operations Center. This was specially timed to simulate an automatic Core Team response, as we would have done if the earthquake had really happened. Upon arrival at each hospital, HDSCS operators determined and reported the quake's effect on infrastructure, communications, and ability to treat victims. Where necessary, we contacted city/county agencies to obtain assistance for the hospitals. Some hospitals simulated moving their Command Posts or setting them up at alternate locations, which reinforced the value of HDSCS communicators being portable and flexible. Deployed to the hospitals were Paul Broden K6MHD, Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, Jean Creason KC6PPY, Louie DeArman K6SM, Galel Fajardo KB6MOH, Bill Hegardt K6WIL, Ted Kramer NB6N, Fred Lochner WA6FRA, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, Joe Moell KØOV, David Mofford W7KTS, Harvey Packard KM6BV (OC-RACES mutual aid), Dale Petes KI6ANS, Heiko Peschel AD6OI, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Fred Wagner KQ6Q, Corky Walker KG6YWY, John Walker AC6GK and Al Way KC6LNP. Responding to the Central Point were Allen Bullock KD6LCL and Tom Gaccione WB2LRH. Net Control and base stations were April Moell WA6OPS and Ralph Swanson WB6JBI.

Allen Bullock KD6LCL at an EMS facilityStandby #80: HDSCS communicators returned to St. Joseph Medical Center on May 10, 2006 for the final cutover to the digital telephone switch that would bring a new building online. (See Standby #79 below.) This time the work was completed in only two and a half hours and phone disruption was much less extensive than two nights before. Nonetheless, HDSCS communicators kept busy handling communications, primarily between Intensive Care Unit and the Laboratory. In the hospital units and Command Post were Paul Broden K6MHD, Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, John Gillette N6NVR, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Jon Schaffer W6UFS, Ken Simpson W6KOS and Fred Wagner KQ6Q. Cheryl Simpson KD6MWZ and April Moell WA6OPS shared outside base station duties.

Standby #79: Following an educational meeting at Tustin Hospital Medical Center on May 8, 2006, fifteen members of HDSCS headed off to St. Joseph Medical Center, which was undergoing a major communications upgrade requiring taking telephones offline that night. To supplement its own walkie-talkies and cell phones, the hospital requested support from HDSCS to make sure that its crucial areas would have adequate back-up communications. Work started at 10 PM Monday and concluded at 4:30 AM Tuesday morning. As analog phone racks were taken out and replaced with new digital racks in the first of a two-part cutover, phones went down periodically throughout the hospital. HDSCS communicators were kept busy handling messages from Intensive Care Unit to Pharmacy, relaying a Code Blue call from the Cardiac Care Unit, initiating "stat" calls for Respiratory Therapy, and getting a report to Surgery on a baby needing an emergency operation. Taking shifts at locations within the hospital were Paul Broden K6MHD, Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, Louie DeArman K6SM, Jerry Drukin AC6FC, Bob Evans W9TQC, Galel Fajardo KB6MOH, Tom Hall N6DGK, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Jim Riedel K6EEE, Jon Schaffer W6UFS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Bob Walker KD6VQA, Corky Walker KG6YWY and John Walker AC7GK. Outside base station operators were Cheryl Simpson KD6MWZ and April Moell WA6OPS.

Practicing decontamination proceduresDrill #145: HDSCS participated in a Tsunami drill on Thursday, May 4, 2006 from 8 AM to noon. Although it was primarily a tabletop exercise at the county level, HDSCS activated members to provide backup communications at the Central Point of the county EOC, at the main OC Emergency Medical Services Agency office and at the OC-EMS Alternate EOC site. In addition, Hoag Hospital tested its activation plan as well as its evacuation plan for portions of the lower campus. We demonstrated our ability to link the hospital to Red Cross, EMS, and county resources. At Hoag Hospital were Galel Fajardo KB6MOH, John Walker AC7GK and Corky Walker KG6YWY. At the OC-EOC at Loma Ridge were David Mofford W7KTS and Ken Simpson W6KOS. Jim McLaughlin AB6UF responded to the EMS office and Allen Bullock KD6LCL (at left above) went to the Alternate EMS EOC. April Moell WA6OPS coordinated the drill and was Net Control.

Standby #78: Huntington Beach Hospital performed servicing on its phone system on Saturday, April 15, 2006 as a follow-up to work done twelve days earlier. On-site communicators were Jon Schaffer W6UFS (Team Leader), Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF and Bob Walker KD6VQA. They arrived about 6:45 AM and work began at 7, as service personnel took all phones offline. Although the hospital was well prepared with some walkie-talkies and cell phones, Amateur Radio communications were still very important. This was especially true in the Intensive Care Unit, where several patient care messages were originated, including two to Pharmacy for medications. Dennis Kidder WA6NIA and Paul Broden K6MHD provided outside base station communications.

Drill #144: Orange Coast Memorial Hospital staged a short-notice disaster drill on the morning of April 7, 2006. To provide simulated external communications, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF responded to the call and operated his equipment from the Command Post. Paul Broden K6MHD was the outside base station communicator.

Standby #77: A brief but important standby operation took place at Huntington Beach Hospital on April 3, 2006. Error messages had been showing up in the hospital's phone system during the day and it was necessary to take down the system for a few minutes for troubleshooting and a complete reset. On short notice, HDSCS fielded three members to the hospital to provide communications backup during the servicing that evening. Other members were standing by at home for quick response if needed. On hand at HBH were Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, Jon Schaffer W6UFS and Marshall Shipley KG6SKD. April Moell WA6OPS and Joe Moell KØOV handled outside base station duties.

Drill #143: On Wednesday, March 22, 2006, the four Orange County hospitals owned by Integrated Healthcare Holdings cooperated in a drill simulating a Richter 7.2 earthquake. All of the hospitals suffered complete failures of telephones and the HEAR/ReddiNet* system. As part of the scenario, each hospital simulated evacuation of a portion of its facility, with five volunteer "patients" transferred by simulated ambulance (a van) to other hospitals. HDSCS made a Core Team (automatic) response to each of the hospitals, arriving shortly after the temblor struck. In addition to keeping the hospitals in touch with one another, one ham operator (Roman Kamienski KG6QMZ) communicated from the van to keep hospitals advised of its location and determine patient drop-off points. Other messages included requests for specialized plumbers, drinking water, and supplies such as sterilizers and balloon-pump catheters. The hospitals were Chapman General Hospital, Coastal Communities Hospital, Western Medical Center--Anaheim and Western Medical Center--Santa Ana. HDSCS members communicating from the hospitals were Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Bill Hegardt K6WIL, Pete Holm KF6HVW, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, Scott Stys KG6LJY, Fred Wagner KQ6Q, Bob Walker KD6VQA, Corky Walker KG6YWY and John Walker AC7GK. Communications from the dispatch Central Point, Emergency Medical Services and two city EOCs were simulated by April Moell WA6OPS and David Mofford W7KTS. Net Control Station was Dennis Kidder WA6NIA.

Meetings and Other Activities

2007 Disaster DozenHDSCS held its traditional annual Year-End/Year-Beginning meeting, complete with the "Final Exam" on January 30, 2008 at the Schilling Training Center of Care Ambulance Service in Orange. As always, attendees were divided into teams to answer the questions, which included hospital terminology and practical in-hospital communications techniques. The team with the best score received prizes and everyone got a share of the well-chiseled UBCB (Unbelievably Big Chocolate Bar), plus some very fancy cupcakes. Certificates and HDSCS coins were presented to the most active members of the previous year, the 2007 Disaster Dozen. They are (in alphabetical order): Paul Broden K6MHD, Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Kim DeCelles K9KIM, Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, Joe Moell KØOV, Dave Mofford W7KTS, Ken Simpson W6KOS, Jon Schaffer W6UFS, Clay Stearns KE6TZR, John Walker AC7GK and Dave West KI6EPI. Winner of the Outstanding New Member award for most participation by a new member in 2007 was Kim DeCelles K9KIM.

North Pole NetworkNorth Pole Network provided a great finish to 2007. A HDSCS team was activated to Childrens Hospital of Orange County (CHOC) on December 18 to link patients and staff to the North Pole station. This was a busy year with over 50 young patients visited. It took all afternoon to get to them all, especially because many required isolation procedures (photo at right). Santa didn't mind, even though he was into the crunch of getting ready for his Christmas Eve ride. The sleigh was already being loaded and lots of last minute toy assembly work was going on in the workshop. As in previous years, we were amazed at Santa's knowledge of the patients (and toys!) as we went from room to room. Lots of smiles and tears were encountered throughout the day by patients, family members, hospital staff and NPN communicators. It was the best non-emergency of the year! This was the 32nd year of North Pole Network by KØOV and WA6OPS in Orange County and the 27th year of HDSCS's involvement in it. Click for an in-depth report and more photos.

Dr. ZdralFor the second year, HDSCS provided communications support for a free drive-through flu shot clinic at Huntington Beach Hospital on Saturday, November 3, 2007. Our communicators were on location to relay information and keep the event running smoothly and safely. They were stationed at the hospital Command Post, the rooftop observation post, and as "rovers" in the outside areas. Everything went well as about 300 arms hung out of car windows waiting to be stuck. HDSCS participants were Allen Bullock KD6LCL, Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, Kim DeCelles K9KIM, Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Reid Green KF6LOK and Dave West KI6EPI.

John Zdral, M.D. was guest speaker at the HDSCS membership meeting on November 12, 2007. Dr. Zdral (at right), a Fullerton ophthalmologist, presented medical issues of the eye. Other topics at the meeting were a learning module on "tiger tails" and instructions for the "Golden Guardian" drill.

Rob VieraThe HDSCS meeting of September 26, 2007 was at the new Kaiser Sand Canyon facility in Irvine. Medical office buildings there are now opening, and the hospital will go into operation in 2008. Our speaker was Rob Viera of Care Ambulance (at left), who talked about ambulance dispatch in Orange County as well as his company's response following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Plans for three upcoming drills were also discussed.

Hamcon 2007At the 2007 ARRL Southwestern Division Convention, September 7 - 9, HDSCS members took the opportunity to tell other hams about the importance of close contact and support for local hospitals. April Moell WA6OPS presented a forum titled "It's the Network -- What it Takes to Maintain Amateur Radio Support for Hospitals." HDSCS also had a booth in the exhibit hall at the Mariott Hotel in Torrance from Friday evening until Sunday noon for one-on-one discussions with attendees (photo at right). Helping April at the booth were Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Roman Kamienski KG6QMZ, Joe Moell KØOV, Ken Simpson W6KOS and John Walker AC7GK.

HDSCS provided all communications for the Kaiser Permanente Medical teams at the 2007 Disney Half-Marathon on Labor Day 2007. An estimated 14,000 runners participated on one of the hottest days of the year. Members were at medical aid stations at the finish and thoughout the route. They also roamed the course on bicycles. Click for more about this important public service event.

Field Day 2007Field Day is an annual communications preparedness exercise of the American Radio Relay League in which HDSCS has participated for many years. 2007 was the sixth year that our Field Day has taken place at Huntington Beach Hospital, one of our supported facilities, and it has never been better. Dave West KI6EPI, Emergency Preparedness Coordinator and Director Of Laboratory Services at HBH, was a "host of hosts," as usual. He arranged for the hospital's decontamination and surge capacity tents to be set up to house our stations and encouraged employees and staff to visit our operation. Scout Troop 1134 came early to the hospital grounds and lashed together a lodgepole tower to support one of our antennas. Their leaders then prepared a barbecue lunch for HDSCS members and the Scouts. In return, the Scouts were given a four-hour class on electronics and communications. That class, plus on-air experience at the HDSCS Field Day stations (photo at left), qualified all the Scouts for their Amateur Radio merit badges. Many thanks to Ken Simpson W6KOS, our Field Day Chairman, for putting together the event and preparing the results package to submit to ARRL. Also thanks to Rick Soikkeli AE6RS for teaching the Merit Badge class, to Jack Hafner KO6IC for coordinating the radio equipment and antennas, and to Kevin Balmforth for the use of his callsign, N6ER (for N-6-Emergency-Room). Click here for a page of photos from Field Day 2007. UPDATE: In the official results, HDSCS achieved the highest point score in its category (2A) for the ARRL Orange Section, which includes Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Inyo counties.

Some CPR class membersThree members led an all-day CPR and first aid class for HDSCS communicators on June 16, 2007 at Placentia-Linda Hospital (photo at right). "CPR for Healthcare Providers" was taught, including adult, child and infant CPR as well as choking. Our instructors included supplemental medical information to help communicators understand terminology that is likely to be used in messages into and out of emergency departments and intensive care units. Instructors were Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, Jackie Schaffer WA6AKP and Jon Schaffer W6UFS.

Scout-O-Rama 2007HDSCS participated in the annual Long Beach area Scout-O-Rama at Heartwell Park on June 2, 2007. We were part of an Amateur Radio display that also included on-air contacts, Morse code introduction, and hidden transmitter hunting. HDSCS set up a simulated hospital Command Post with two Amateur Radio stations. The mock scenario involved hospital damage and a loss of normal communications. When a Scout arrived to participate, he or she was assigned to one of two HDSCS communicators at the Command Post to handle messages (photo at left). They included requests for blood, patient transfer, and status reports to county Emergency Medical Services. The Scout made the call to the appropriate entity and read the message. They found that it took a little effort to coordinate talking and using the mike button. They also learned about message priority and hospital abbreviations. Scouts who handled messages earned special certificates. This was the fifth year that HDSCS has participated in this Scout event. On-site members who set up the Command Post and assisted with the Scouts were Paul Broden K6MHD, Kim DeCelles K9KIM, Dennis Kidder W6DQ, April Moell WA6OPS, David Mofford W7KTS, Ken Simpson W6KOS and Alex Valdez K9BLK. Home base stations playing various roles during the traffic-handling included Jim McLaughlin AB6UF, Dale Petes KI6ANS, Ray Rittenhouse KF6WZN and Dave West KI6EPI. Also participating in the Amateur Radio display at this event were members Tom Gaccione WB2LRH, Joe Moell KØOV, Jay Thompson W6JAY and Richard Thompson WA6NOL. Click for a page of photos from this event.

Mary MasseyAt the HDSCS meeting of May 30, 2007, members heard updates on the Hospital Incident Command System (HICS), including Incident Response Guides and Incident Action Plans. Presenter was Mary Massey (at right), who is Surge Capacity Coordinator of the Healthcare Association of Southern California. Plans for an upcoming drill were also discussed.

The annual HDSCS Orientation and Review Workshop took place at the Orange County Emergency Operations Center on Saturday, March 3, 2007. It was a full day filled with reviews of basic concepts, procedures, and preparedness, along with updates on handling medical messages and doing realistic drills. Members brought in their "go kits" for show and tell. Just being unveiled across the country is the new Hospital Incident Command System (HICS), which we had a chance to learn about from member Duane Marriotti WB9RER. New members were given tours of the EOC and learned about the HEAR/ReddiNet* location. A major highlight of the day was the disaster potluck with everything from baked beans, meatballs and lasagna to seafood salad, fresh fruit, carmel apple pie, home baked bread, and cookies. During that feast we heard from Dr. Sam Stratton, the new Orange County Medical Director of EMS and from Bryan Hanley, the Regional Disaster Medical Health Coordinator for California Office of Emergency Services, Region 1. Click for more about our annual workshop.

Service pinMany HDSCS members are wearing special pins to recognize their prior service to medical facilities. These 1.2-inch HDSCS logo pins are being given to current members who have previously provided Amateur Radio communications within one of our 34 hospitals when telephones were inoperative or overloaded in a planned or unplanned event. Pins will be presented to new members after their first service within a hospital under the same circumstances. Forty-five HDSCS members qualified for pins by serving in the 16 planned and 13 unplanned Orange County hospital telephone outages in 2005 and 2006. Approximately a dozen additional members qualified in previous years. According to HDSCS leader April Moell WA6OPS, "This is a great way to recognize our members for doing what they train and prepare to do, namely to help hospital patients by providing essential communications for their caregivers. Thanks to Dave West KI6EPI for donating these fine pins."

Flu Shot ClinicThe last HDSCS member meeting of 2006 took place at Kindred Hospital in Santa Ana on November 13, with two presentations. First, members heard Bruce Chappell KE6TSM, Jackie Schaffer WA6AKP and Jon Schaffer W6UFS speak about procedures that are followed after a patient passes in a hospital. Then they learned from Joe Moell KØOV about the HDSCS portable repeater and our rules and procedures for crossband repeating to link from inside hospitals to the countywide net when an external antenna connection is unavailable. Plans for the upcoming statewide medical drill were also discussed.

October 2006 meetingThe HDSCS membership meeting of October 4, 2006 at Fountain Valley Regional Medical Center featured a detailed presentation on avian influenza by Greg Boswell, Program Director of Orange County Emergency Medical Services Agency. Potential effects on hospitals and the community were emphasized. Members from several city RACES groups attended as guests. After the presentation, plans for the upcoming city/county RACES/ARES drill were discussed.

April and Joe Moell (WA6OPS and KØOV) presented a mini-workshop at Huntington Beach Hospital on Saturday, August 19, 2006 for new members and those who have been unable to attend a full HDSCS Orientation/Review Workshop in March. Besides 14 HDSCS members in attendance, there were two hams from Long Beach and one from Olive View UCLA Medical Center who want to support hospitals in their areas of Los Angeles County.

Eddie CoxEddie Cox, Manager of Plant Operations and Disaster Coordinator at Irvine Medical Center, was the guest presenter at the HDSCS meeting of June 14, 2006. Eddie (shown at right) spent two weeks in the New Orleans area assisting Tenet Healthcare hospitals in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. He shared many of his experiences involving the hospitals' complete loss of communications, power, and other resources, as well as the lack of local plans and leadership that severely impacted the hospitals there. This was an outstanding learning experience that will help HDSCS and its members to better prepare for support of Orange County hospitals.

The HDSCS meeting of May 8, 2006 was held at Tustin Hospital Medical Center. HDSCS supported this facility during a 16-hour phone outage caused by severed trunk lines in October 2004. After a pizza supper provided by the hospital, members viewed two videos on earthquakes and then made plans for the upcoming Blue/Green Net multi-hospital earthquake drill. Plans for ARRL Field Day were also discussed.

Outreach

Talk to DCS meeting

Regular contact with our served hospitals and other agencies insures that HDSCS will be remembered and called out quickly in all Orange County hospital emergency situations. Each year, HDSCS leaders participate in over 25 meetings with Disaster/Safety Committee members from hospitals in the Red, Blue/Green, and Yellow Nets for coordination and drill planning. HDSCS is also represented at regular meetings of the Orange County Emergency Medical Services' Disaster Advisory Group (4 per year) and the ReddiNet* Technical Advisory Group (2 per year). In addition to those meetings, HDSCS has been on the road, explaining our mission to medical care personnel, ham radio operators, and the public in southern California and elsewhere. Special presentations, conferences and exhibitions in recent months include:


* ReddiNet® is a commercial UHF digital inter-hospital communications system sold to hospitals by Healthcare Association of Southern California and maintained by the Communications Department of the County of Orange.

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This page updated 1 February 2008