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- Questions About Raises, Shuttle Fees Top Administrators Forum
A UAMS Update article about Meet Your Administrator”
- Gruenwald Is New U.S. Citizen
Michael Gruenwald becomes U.S. citizen
- Gruenwald Is New U.S. Citizen
Michael Gruenwald becomes U.S. citizen
- Doughnut Sale to Help UAMS Psychiatry Youth Program
A UAMS Update article about a bake sale
- Call-in Announcements, Forums Will Give Employees More Information
A UAMS Update article about plans to improve communication between administration and employees of UAMS Medical Center
- IT Help Desk 400,000th Call Sweepstakes
IT Help Desk 400,000th Call Sweepstates
- The UAMS Help Desk Today - Ten Years Later
The UAMS Help Desk Today - Ten Years Later
- Free Tickets for UAMS Nights at Ray Winder Field
A UAMS Update article about UAMS Night with the Travelers
- ARIA Training Sessions May 19 - June 27 at UAMS
A UAMS Update article about May 19 - June 27 training sessions
- Human Research Forum Is May 21
A UAMS Update article about human research Q & A
- Accolades, May 2003
Accolades to UAMS faculty and staff
- GCRC Deadline Changed to July 1 for Grant Proposals
A UAMS Update article about GCRC pilot grants
- History of the Help Desk
- Watch, Look & Listen: Preview of New UAMS Public Service Campaign
- Forum to Discuss Impact of HIPAA on Research
Update article about HIPAA and research at UAMS
- Human Research Q and A Forum June 27
A UAMS Update article about the human research forum
- Emailed Version of UAMS Notice of Privacy Practices
UAMS Notice of Privacy Practices
- Free UAF Symposium Aug. 14-15 on Evolution of Human Diet
A UAMS Update article about a diet symposium at UAF
- Tom Butler is Arkansas Administrator of the Year
Tom Butler of UAMS Is Arkansas Administrator of the Year
- Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.*
Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.
- Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.*
Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.
- Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
- Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
- Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure®!
Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure!
- Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure®!
Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure!
- UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
- UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
- Photo Album: Stephens Institute Was a Highlight of Medicine Alumni Reunion
Photo Album: Stephens Institute Was a Highlight of Medicine Alumni Reunion
- Kids First in Fort Smith Celebrated Fourth in Style
Kids First in Fort Smith Celebrated Fourth in Style
- Class of 1948 Dedicates Endowment to Excellence in Education
Class of 1948 Dedicates Endowment to Excellence in Education
- Pharmacy Professor Elected to American College of Clinical Pharmacy
Pharmacy Professor Elected to American College of Clinical Pharmacy
- Pharmaceutical Scientists, Graduate Students Meet at UAMS
Pharmaceutical Scientists, Graduate Students Meet at UAMS
- Stephanie Gardner, Pharm.D., Ed.D., Is Interim Dean of College of Pharmacy
Stephanie Gardner, Pharm.D., Ed.D., Is Interim Dean of College of Pharmacy
- New COPH Survey Research Expert Eager to Develop New Ways of Measuring Public Health
New COPH Survey Research Expert Eager to Develop New Ways of Measuring Public Health
- Ready, Set, Go! UAMS, KATV Launch Get Healthy Arkansas™
UAMS, KATV Launch Get Healthy Arkansas™
- UAMS Clinical Services - Departments and Programs
UAMS Clinical Departments and Programs
- UAMS Clinical Services - Departments and Programs
UAMS Clinical Departments and Programs
- UAMS Medical Center Offers Free Prostate Cancer Screenings
UAMS Medical Center will offer free screenings for prostate cancer on September 21- 22, 2001.
- UAMS Medical Center Offers Free Prostate Cancer Screenings
UAMS Medical Center will offer free screenings for prostate cancer on September 21- 22, 2001.
- UAMS Medical Center Offers Free Prostate Cancer Screenings
UAMS Medical Center will offer free screenings for prostate cancer on September 21- 22, 2001.
- Free Workshops on Lead-Safe Practices to be Held Nov. 24
Free Workshops on Lead-Safe Practices to be Held Nov. 24
- UAMS Employees Can Find Thanksgiving Meal at Area Church
UAMS Employees Working Thanksgiving Can Find Meal at Area Church
- UAMS Employees Can Find Thanksgiving Meal at Area Church
UAMS Employees Working Thanksgiving Can Find Meal at Area Church
- Nov. 25, Science Café – ‘What’s The Big Deal About Nanoscience?
LITTLE ROCK – The Science Café Little Rock, co-sponsored by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), will hold its next public forum, What’s The Big Deal About Nanoscience?on Nov. 25. Panelists will describe their experience and research on nanoscience, nanoparticles, nanomedicine and broader nanotechnology applications in several areas.
- Distinguished Lecturer Hobbs Sees Progress in Fight Against Birth Defects
Nov. 14, 2008 | UAMS birth defects expert Charlotte Hobbs, M.D., Ph.D., knows how far science has come in helping babies born with any of the 30 or more types of birth defects.
- Distinguished Lecturer Hobbs Sees Progress in Fight Against Birth Defects
Nov. 14, 2008 | UAMS birth defects expert Charlotte Hobbs, M.D., Ph.D., knows how far science has come in helping babies born with any of the 30 or more types of birth defects.
- Distinguished Lecturer Hobbs Sees Progress in Fight Against Birth Defects
Nov. 14, 2008 | UAMS birth defects expert Charlotte Hobbs, M.D., Ph.D., knows how far science has come in helping babies born with any of the 30 or more types of birth defects.
- Thanksgiving Desserts Available In Cafeteria
Thanksgiving Desserts Available In Cafeteria
- Thanksgiving Desserts Available In Cafeteria
Thanksgiving Desserts Available In Cafeteria
- Purchase a Star Now for the Miracle Star Tree at the Cancer Institute
Purchase a Star Now for the Miracle Star Tree at the Cancer Institute
- Purchase a Star Now for the Miracle Star Tree at the Cancer Institute
Purchase a Star Now for the Miracle Star Tree at the Cancer Institute
- Walton Family Foundation Donates $300,000 to UAMS for Northwest Campus
Walton Family Foundation Donates $300,000 to UAMS for Northwest Campus
- Walton Family Foundation Donates $300,000 to UAMS for Northwest Campus
Walton Family Foundation Donates $300,000 to UAMS for Northwest Campus
- JEI April 2007 Outlook Newsletter
- April JEI 2007 Outlook Newsletter
- Free or Low-Cost Women’s Health Screenings Offered Dec. 11, Thanks to UAMS Witness Project
LITTLE ROCK – Free or low-cost mammograms are available Dec. 11 to Lee County women 40 and older who qualify through The Witness Project, a community-based cancer education program of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Public Health.
- Arkansas Minority Health Commission Funding to Benefit Underserved, Uninsured
- Arkansas Minority Health Commission Funding to Benefit Underserved, Uninsured
- TIAA-CREF Representatives on Campus Dec. 2, 3 and 4
TIAA-CREF Representatives on Campus
- TIAA-CREF Representatives on Campus Dec. 2, 3 and 4
TIAA-CREF Representatives on Campus
- Friday@Noon: Citrix Access Gateways
Friday@Noon: Citrix Access Gateways
- Friday@Noon: Citrix Access Gateways
Friday@Noon: Citrix Access Gateways
- Holidays Are A Time For Dancing
Holidays Are A Time For Dancing
- Holiday Giving Opportunities
Holiday Giving Opportunities
- JEI April 2007 Outlook Newsletter
- JEI April 2007 Outlook Newsletter
- UAMS College of Public Health Hosts Mexican Counterparts
Nov. 19, 2008 | A budding relationship between the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health and the only accredited school of public health in Mexico was strengthened after a recent visit.
- UAMS College of Public Health Hosts Mexican Counterparts
Nov. 19, 2008 | A budding relationship between the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health and the only accredited school of public health in Mexico was strengthened after a recent visit.
- UAMS College of Public Health Hosts Mexican Counterparts
Nov. 19, 2008 | A budding relationship between the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health and the only accredited school of public health in Mexico was strengthened after a recent visit.
- Walton Family Foundation Donates $300,000 to UAMS for Northwest Campus
Walton Family Foundation Donates $300,000 to UAMS for Northwest Campus
- UAMS Northwest Arkansas Campus Receives $1.5 Million from Arkansas Philanthropists
LITTLE ROCK – A trio of Arkansas philanthropists today gave a total of $1.5 million towards development of the northwest Arkansas campus of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- Arkansas Philanthropists Give UAMS Northwest $1.5 Million
Arkansas Philanthropists Give UAMS Northwest $1.5 Million
- College of Medicine Dean's Research Forum
College of Medicine Dean's Research Forum
- College of Medicine Dean's Research Forum
College of Medicine Dean's Research Forum
- November 2008 Issue
November 2008 Issue
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SEPT. 13, 2001 | University Hospital at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) is ready for large disasters or emergencies when they occur.
In an event such as the Tuesday attacks on New York and Washington, D.C., University Hospital’s Emergency Department is ready to treat hundreds of patients if necessary.
The National Disaster Medical System notified University Hospital to stand by to receive patients from New York or other attack locations if necessary, according to Rebecca Liggin, M.D., chair of the hospital’s House Disaster Committee.
”UAMS was able to rapidly assess how many patients we would be able to accommodate and what resources would be needed. We were able to give [NDMS] an accurate number of victims we could care for in the Emergency Department and the hospital. We were ready to receive victims from New York if they needed hospitals outside the city and we were ready in case the terrorists hit closer to home,” she said.
When large emergencies occur, ”we take as many of the severely injured as we possibly can,” according to Lynn Wallace, R.N., CEN, head nurse manager for the Emergency Department, or ER.
In a natural disaster or a large accident, emergency workers on the scene rank victims according to the severity of their injuries. Then they notify University Hospital that they are sending patients who are “red,” “yellow,” “green,” or “black.”
Red signifies a life-threatening or limb-threatening injury.
Yellow signifies urgent need for medical care.
Green means the patient is stable and could wait as long as 24 hours for treatment.
Black means the victim has no chance of survival.
Once victims reach the dock of University Hospital’s Emergency Department, nurses and physicians are standing by to reassess their injuries. In a large-scale emergency, red patients go directly to the ER while yellow patients go to a treatment area in a nearby wide hallway. Green patients go to the hospital’s Short Stay Unit.
The hospital routinely stages emergency drills to be sure that employees are ready in a crisis. It has written plans for different large-scale emergencies; special kits for victims and for different hospital workers; and a system for calling off-duty health care professionals into the Emergency Department.
”Once we had 27 Emergency Department nurses respond,” Wallace says. “We’re all humans; we all have families that we hate to leave in the middle of a tornado or something like that. But we take care of business.”
There are specific jobs for employees in Physical Plant, Housekeeping, Telecommunications, public relations, and other departments. There is even a locked metal box with supplies for treating victims of an accident at a nuclear power plant.
If many emergency patients arrive at once, the hospital may discharge some patients, transfer others from the Intensive Care Unit, or postpone scheduled surgeries. For patients who have severe burns, the hospital may treat urgent medical problems and then transfer them to Arkansas Children’s Hospital, an affiliate of UAMS with a burn center.
The Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, another affiliate of UAMS, also treats many patients during disasters.
After a disaster, helping victims and their families recover emotionally can be the hardest job.
”Without the chaplains and social workers, we couldn’t do what we need to do,” Carol Murry, director of critical care nursing for University Hospital and interim director of the Emergency Department, says.
In addition to treating patients during crises, UAMS trains emergency physicians. Barry Brenner, M.D., Ph.D., is chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine in the College of Medicine. He comments, "Emergency physicians are ideally suited for disasters because they have enormous breadth of knowledge and a great facility with procedures, can make decisions rapidly, and are able to improvise when short on supplies."
Photos
Top: Emergency nurse Candice Marshall, R.N., stands in the long hallway that University Hospital converts to a treatment area for “yellow” patients in urgent need of medical care. The hallway is large enough to accommodate more than 100 patients. (Amy Theriac, UAMS Media Services)
Second: The Emergency Department at University Hospital is always ready for an emergency. (Amy Theriac, UAMS Media Servicess)
Third: University Hospital workers practice for triage, the process of ranking victims so that the most severely injured receive treatment first, in a past drill. (UAMS Media Services)
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Department link: http://www.uams.edu/ems/
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