Table of ContentsTable of ContentsACPE (Pharmacists).................................................................................................................................64ADA (Dentists) (Dental Hygienists)..........................................................................................................65AMA PRA Category 1 credit TM ................................................................................................................65(Physicians) (Physicians Assistants) (Psychiatrists)ANCC (Nurses) (Nurse Practitioners).......................................................................................................65APA (Psychologists)................................................................................................................................65CECBEMS (EMTs)....................................................................................................................................65CHES (Certified Health Education Specialists)..........................................................................................65MFT & LCSW (Marriage and Family <strong>The</strong>rapists) (Licensed Clinical Social Workers of California)..............65MSM (Morticians)...................................................................................................................................65NASW (Social Workers)..........................................................................................................................66NBCC (Certified Counselors)...................................................................................................................66NEHA (Environmental Health Specialists)................................................................................................66Planning Committee.......................................................................................................................................67Planning Subcommittee.................................................................................................................................68Presenters......................................................................................................................................................69Presenter Disclosures.....................................................................................................................................73Poster Presentations.......................................................................................................................................75Americans with Disabilities Act PolicyChesapeake Health Education Program, Inc. (CHEP.INC.) wishes to ensure no individual with adisability is excluded, denied services, segregated or otherwise treated differently <strong>from</strong> otherindividuals attending this training because of the absence of auxiliary aids and services. If yourequire any special arrangements to attend and fully participate in any educational workshopprovided by CHEP.INC., please notify a member of the CHEP.INC. staff at the Training Summitregistration desk.4<strong>2012</strong> Integrated Training Summit
Integrated Training Summit Partner DescriptionsNational Disaster Medical System (NDMS)<strong>The</strong> National Disaster Medical System is a Federally coordinatedsystem that augments the nation’s medical response capability. <strong>The</strong> overallpurpose of the NDMS is to supplement an integrated national medicalresponse capability for assisting state and local authorities in dealing withthe medical impacts of major peacetime disasters and to provide support tothe military and Department of Veterans Affairs medical systems in caringfor casualties evacuated back to the United States <strong>from</strong> overseas armedconventional conflicts.<strong>The</strong> National Response Framework utilizes the NDMS as part of theDepartment of Health and Human Services, Office of <strong>Preparedness</strong> andResponse, under Emergency Support Function #8 (ESF#8), Health andMedical Services, to support Federal agencies in the management andcoordination of the Federal medical response to major emergencies andFederally declared disasters, including:❖ Natural disasters❖ Major transportation accidents❖ Technological disasters❖ Acts of terrorism including weapons of mass destruction eventsOur VisionTo serve the Federal response by providing disaster medical care to the nation.Our MissionIt is the mission of the National Disaster Medical System to temporarilysupplement Federal, tribal, state, and local capabilities by funding,organizing, training, equipping, deploying, and sustaining a specialized andfocused range of public health and medical capabilities.<strong>The</strong> components of the National Disaster Medical System include thefollowing:❖ Medical response to a disaster area in the form of personnel (teamsand individuals), supplies, and equipment❖ Patient movement <strong>from</strong> a disaster site to unaffected areas of thenation❖ Definitive medical care at participating hospitals in unaffected areasUnited States Public Health Service (USPHS)<strong>The</strong> mission of the U.S. Public Health Service CommissionedCorps is to protect, promote, and advance the health and safety of ournation. As America’s uniformed service of public health professionals, theCommissioned Corps achieves its mission through:❖ Rapid and effective response to public health needs❖ Leadership and excellence in public health practices❖ Advancement of public health scienceAs one of the nation’s seven uniformed services, the Commissioned Corpsfills essential public health leadership and service roles within the Federalgovernment agencies and programs. <strong>The</strong> Corps’ 6,200-plus active-duty officersare full-time, well-trained, highly qualified public health professionals.Commissioned Corps emergency response teams are managed by the Officeof the Surgeon General. <strong>The</strong> multidisciplinary teams are capable of respondingto domestic disasters, emergencies, public health crises, and internationalhumanitarian missions. <strong>The</strong>re are 41 response teams in the CommissionedCorps Readiness and Response System as well as five rosters of multidisciplinaryindividual augmentees. “Projecting and Responding Everyday”Medical Reserve Corps (MRC)<strong>The</strong> Medical Reserve Corps is a national network of local groupsof volunteers committed to improving the health, safety, and resiliencyof their communities. MRC volunteers include medical and public healthprofessionals, as well as others interested in strengthening the public healthinfrastructure and improving the preparedness and response capabilitiesof their local jurisdiction. MRC units identify, screen, train, and organizethe volunteers, utilizing them to support routine public health activities andaugment preparedness and response efforts.<strong>The</strong> Division of the Civilian Volunteer Medical Reserve Corps (DCVMRC)is headquartered in the Office of the Surgeon General. It functions as aclearinghouse for information and guidance to help communities establish,implement, and maintain MRC units nationwide. Office activities includestrategic planning, policy development, program operations, deploymentoperations, communications, stakeholder outreach, and technical assistance.<strong>The</strong>se activities are carried out by DCVMRC staff and the MRC RegionalCoordinators.Emergency System for AdvanceRegistration of Volunteer HealthProfessionals (ESAR-VHP)<strong>The</strong> Emergency System for Advance Registration of Volunteer Health Professionalsprogram is housed in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for <strong>Preparedness</strong> andResponse at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. <strong>The</strong> missionof the ESAR-VHP program is to establish a national network of state-basedprograms for managing volunteers at all tiers of response. ESAR-VHP supports62 states and territories in establishing standardized volunteer registrationprograms for disasters and medical and public health emergencies. <strong>The</strong> program,administered on the state level, verifies health professionals’ identification andcredentials so that they can respond more quickly when disaster strikes. Byregistering through ESAR-VHP, volunteers’ identities, licenses, credentials, andhospital privileges are all verified in advance, saving valuable time in emergencysituations. ESAR-VHP has grown to encompass the cumulative registration ofover 188,000 health and non-health professional volunteers across the 62 stateand territorial programs..Chesapeake Health EducationProgram, Inc. (CHEP.INC)<strong>The</strong> Chesapeake Health Education Program is a multifaceted nonprofitcorporation established in 1990. CHEP is recognized as a trusted partnerboth nationally and locally by Federal, state, and local organizations as wellas professional organizations that are involved in providing education andtraining services. CHEP is a recognized provider of professional accreditation,maintains strong partnerships with a variety of community groups, and playsan important role in enhancing the vision and mission of its Federal partnersthrough the provision of continuing education and transitional housing forhomeless veterans. <strong>Through</strong> partnerships with the Federal government and thecommunity, CHEP is able to bridge the gap between available resources andidentified needs. <strong>The</strong> resulting partnerships transcend diminishing resources,changes in technology, and the constantly changing healthcare climate.Partner Descriptions<strong>2012</strong> Integrated Training Summit 5
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Planning CommitteeDawn AnastasiaChe
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PresentersMary Massey, BSN, MA, MEP
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2012 Poster PresentationsMRCPoster
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2012 Poster PresentationsApplicatio
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2012 Poster PresentationsEducation
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Integrated Training Summit Acronym