Visit Vale Health Marketplace?
You are leaving balladhealth.org to visit Vale Health’s Wellness Marketplace.
Disclaimer: Ballad Health does not sponsor, endorse or recommend any product or resource listed in the marketplace.
When an outbreak of infectious disease occurs, it’s essential for healthcare providers to have a well-planned, coordinated approach to treating the disease and protecting the community. That’s why Ballad Health has organized a panel of experts to provide training and education to regional healthcare providers on the topic of serious communicable diseases that are either highly infectious or extremely rare and often never seen before
The conference, titled “Disease X: Are You Prepared?” will be held March 26 at Bristol Regional Medical Center. Attendees of the grant-funded conference will hear from nationally-recognized medical professionals about their experiences and learn how to be prepared for any disease that may impact our region.
Being prepared involves quickly and accurately identifying an infectious disease, then isolating and treating the patient or patients as appropriate.
“It’s better to plan for this now rather than in the midst of a global outbreak like the Ebola outbreak of 2014,” said Jamie Swift, Ballad Health’s director of infection prevention. “This conference will provide our healthcare community with the latest news of what is happening nationally, as well as internationally in the world of infectious diseases. It will also give us the opportunity to review our regional, state and national response plans.
Ballad Health’s Johnson City Medical Center is one of five hospitals in Tennessee that is designated as an assessment hospital in the Highly Infectious Disease Treatment Network. Team members – including emergency department staff and dedicated ICU nurses – make up the Strike Team, which participates in annual trainings and exercises to ensure Ballad Health remains prepared to respond. Each year, in conjunction with the Tennessee Department of Health, an unannounced exercise is conducted to truly assess staff readiness.
“Disease X” is a top global concern identified by the World Health Organization in 2018 and refers to an unknown pathogen that may cause disease and potentially an epidemic in the future.
The newest threats faced in healthcare include an antibiotic-resistant bacteria called carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae CRE, along with Candida. auris, an incipient fungal infection that is difficult to identify and treat. Patient screenings for C. auris have already been implemented at Ballad Health facilities.
The speakers of “Disease X: Are You Prepared?” include:
The conference is being offered in conjunction with the Northeast Tennessee Healthcare Preparedness Coalition.
Medical providers, including physicians, nurses, labs, phlebotomy and EMS within Ballad Health and outside agencies, have been invited to attend.
“While infectious disease outbreaks are an ever-present risk, I urge community members to be more concerned with common – but still serious — threats like the flu, rather than Ebola,” said Swift. “In the event that an outbreak occurs, however, our regional healthcare providers are trained and ready to respond.”