Nursing Response to Hurricane Milton
In preparation for the hurricane, more than 200 hospitals evacuated patients and put a hold on surgeries, according to a Guardian report, but in the days since Milton made landfall, some are returning to normal operations.
Tampa Bay resident Gina Quinn, RN, was working at Tampa Bay General Hospital when Milton made landfall. Originally from Conception Bay South in Canada, she told CBC that once the storm pass, the hospital was “inundated.”
But she was grateful the area didn’t take a “direct hit” from the storm.
“There’s almost a sense of relief after the hurricane because even though the place is a mess and there’s no gas in it, and everything is just crazy right now, you know you survived and what’s done is done and now you just get to fixing,” Quinn told CBC.
UMC Children’s Hospital in Lubbock, Texas, sent its NICU transport team to Florida, and it’s expected to offer assistance for up to two weeks.
“It’s stressful to have an infant in critical condition under the best circumstances, but to be, you know, to be in the situation that they’re in in Florida, and for the parents and for the medical providers, for our team to go and be able to support them and to provide aid it’s an honor to the staff,” Jill Shanklin, vice president of Nursing Excellence for UMC, told KCBD. “We’re so proud of them as an organization, and so it’s, it’s exciting for us.”
A Disaster Medical Assistance Team (DMAT) from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Service also has been deployed to the greater Tampa area. The 37-member team, according to DHS, is supporting St. Joseph’s Hospital in Tampa.
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