Home Health Care Services Pandemic Influenza Planning Checklist
Documents in PDF format require the Adobe Acrobat Reader®. If you experience problems with PDF documents, please download the latest version of the Reader®.
Home Health Care Services Pandemic Influenza Planning Checklist (PDF - 200.96 KB)Planning for pandemic influenza is critical. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have developed the following checklist to help public and private organizations that provide home health care services assess and improve their preparedness for responding to pandemic influenza. Home health agencies will likely be called upon to provide care for patients who do not require hospitalization for pandemic influenza, or for whom hospitalization is not an option because hospitals have reached their capacity to admit patients. These agencies may become overburdened very quickly and shortages of personnel and supplies for providing home health care may occur. This checklist is modeled after the one included in the HHS Pandemic Influenza Plan (www.hhs.gov/pandemicflu/plan/sup3.html#app2). The list is comprehensive but not complete; each home care agency will have unique and unanticipated issues that will need to be addressed as part of a pandemic planning exercise. Also, some items on the checklist may not be applicable to a given agency. Collaboration with hospitals, local pandemic planning committees and public health agencies will be essential to ensure that the affected population receives needed health care services. Further information can be found at www.pandemicflu.gov.
This checklist identifies key areas for pandemic influenza planning. Home health care organizations can use this tool to identify the strengths and weaknesses of current planning efforts. Links to websites with information are provided throughout the document. However, actively seeking information that is available locally or at the state level will be necessary to complete the development of the plan. Also, for some elements of the plan (e.g., education and training programs), information may not be immediately available and it will be necessary to monitor selected websites for new and updated information.
Checklist Sections
1. Structure for planning and decision making.
Tasks | Not Started | In Progress | Completed |
|---|---|---|---|
| |||
A planning committee has been created to specifically address pandemic influenza preparedness. | |||
| |||
| |||
2. Development of a written pandemic influenza plan.
Tasks | Not Started | In Progress | Completed |
|---|---|---|---|
| |||
| |||
| |||
| |||
| |||
3. Elements of an influenza pandemic plan.
Tasks | Not Started | In Progress | Completed |
|---|---|---|---|
| |||
| |||
| |||
| |||
| |||
| |||
| |||
| |||
| |||
1 The committee could be very small (e.g., two or three staff members) or very large, depending on the size and needs of the organization. Members of the "group of professional personnel" required by CMS as one of the Home Health Agency Conditions of Participation should be included on the planning committee.
2 As communities develop their pandemic response plans, the provision of home health care will be a pivotal concern. Home health care agencies should have input into these plans to ensure there are no conflicts between what the agency can provide and what the community expects.

















