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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response

The Express: February 2024

This issue of The Express highlights the following new and updated resources: 


Please reach out to ASPR TRACIE if you need technical assistance.

Hospital Mass Casualty Response Plan Considerations 

The term “mass casualty incident” (MCI) refers to the combination of patients and care requirements that require mobilization of additional resources to meet the demand. MCIs generally occur without warning and a concise plan is needed to ensure rapid and efficient response. Hospital Mass Casualty Response Plan Considerations can assist hospitals in developing a new—or vetting an existing—MCI plan.

Disaster Behavioral Health: Resources at Your Fingertips (Updated)

When disasters strike, the ripple effects can be significant. Incorporating disaster behavioral health (DBH) into all phases of emergency management can ensure resident and responder preparedness, an effective, compassionate response effort, and a more resilient community moving forward. ASPR TRACIE recently updated Disaster Behavioral Health: Resources at Your Fingertips to provide information on and links to select DBH programs and resources that can be of immediate use to emergency health care providers, emergency management stakeholders, and other professionals and survivors affected by naturally occurring or human-caused incidents. 

The Evolution of Patient Load Balancing: The Southwest Texas Regional Advisory Council 

Regional patient load balancing is an art and science that has evolved across the U.S., particularly over the past few years. In The Evolution of Patient Load Balancing, ASPR TRACIE interviewed Eric Epley of the Southwest Texas Regional Advisory Council—who was the Council’s first official hire in 1998 and currently serves as the executive director/chief executive officer—to learn how the Council has evolved and promising practices in load balancing and other trauma-related efforts. Access Issue 18 of The Exchange for more articles on innovations in health care surge management.

Register Today: AHEPP’s Annual Conference

Registration for the Association of Healthcare Emergency Preparedness Professionals’ 2024 Annual Conference ends February 25. Register today and visit the ASPR TRACIE Team at our booth! We will also be highlighting our On-Campus Healthcare Facility Armed Assailant Planning Considerations document during a two-hour workshop on February 28, from 2:40-4:30 PM.

Project ECHO Clinical Readiness Rounds

ASPR and Project ECHO have launched HHS/ASPR Project ECHO Clinical Readiness Rounds to create peer-to-peer learning networks where clinicians who have more experience treating patients in emergency situations share their challenges and successes with clinicians across the U.S. and around the world with a wide variety of experience of these situations. Topics for sessions are based on new and emergent information around emergency preparedness and topics requested by participants. Please contact C19ECHO@salud.unm.edu for more information.

Updates from the Office of Critical Infrastructure Protection

ASPR’s Office of Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) offers a variety of newsletters to keep stakeholders informed during emergency response and steady state. The newsletters inform stakeholders of the most significant issues facing the health care and public health sector, including cybersecurity, health care supply chains, and more. If you are interested in receiving CIP newsletters, visit the CIP newsletter subscription webpage.

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