DISASTER MANAGEMENT

amintabish 278 views 91 slides Jan 30, 2023
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About This Presentation

Disaster Management
Emergency Preparedness
Disaster Mitigation


Slide Content

DISASTER
MANAGEMENT
Professor Syed Amin Tabish
FRCP(London), FRCP(Edin.), FAMS, MD HA (AIIMS)
Postdoc Fellowship, Bristol University (England)
Doctorate in Educational Leadership (USA)

Definition
The WHO defines disaster as 'any
occurrencethat causes damage,
economic destruction, loss of
human lifeand deterioration in
healthand health services on a
scale sufficient to warrant an
extraordinary response from
outside the affected community
or area'.

Disasters: the scenario
A global problem: a major disaster
occurs somewhere in the world almost
on a daily basis
Affects the advancesbeing achieved
health & socioeconomic development
Increased vulnerabilityto natural
disasters due to environmental
degradation, industrialization, pollution,
threat to biodiversity
Rapid climate change
Population explosion (overexploitation of
resources)

Impact of Disasters
Ecological disruption
Loss of human life
Military expenditures:6 month’s of world’s
arms spending would pay for a 10 -year
program proving food & health services in
developing countries
Deterioration of health services
to warrant an extraordinary response
from outside the affected community or
area.
Result in significant morbidity

Diversity of the Planet
The vastness and diversity of the planet
makes it difficult to build up an overall
picture of what needs to be done and the
impact of what has been done.
The same vast distances make it hard to
react rapidly and effectively to sudden
events-an earthquake -in parts of the
world with shifting populations and poor
communications.
New technology -fast bandwidth reliable
communications, the internet, high
resolution satellite imagery -can provide
support in these situations.

Classifying Disasters
Natural:earthquakes, floods, fires,
hurricanes
Technological(number of nuclear
arsenals has exceeded 50,000), deadlier
weapons, laser-guided missiles, carpet
bombs, etc ……Hiroshima (Aug 6,1945) &
Nagasaki (Aug 19, 1945); Nuclear reactor
Accident in Chernobyl (Ukraine); Toxic
gas leak in Bhopal (India)…..improper
management of industrial technologies
Chemical & Biological Weapons
Complex Emergencies (conflict-related):
Afghanistan (2.5 m), Iraq (1991, 2004-6) –
hi-tech war [2,10,000 tons of bombs in 43
days dropped in 1991

Disaster Planning
Pre-disaster:the identification,
understanding & analysis of natural &
other hazards
Disaster Management System : to
reduce the vulnerability of people to
damage (disaster prevention), injury and
loss of life & property resulting from
catastrophes; to prepare for prompt &
efficient rescue, care and treatment of
victims; response & recovery
Disaster planningstarts with community
awareness

Disaster Management
Disaster Preparedness: activities that are
carried out prior to the advance notice of a
catastrophe to facilitate the use of available
resources, relief & rehabilitation
Disaster mitigation: ongoing effort to lesson
the impact disasters have on people &
property
Disaster Management: the process of
addressing an event that has the potential to
seriously disrupt the social fabric of commun.

Pre-hospital Emergency
Preparedness
Efficient system of providing
prompt medical care to injured to
save many lives or limbs by
beginning treatment before the
patient reached the hospital:
CPR, ATLS, ACLS, closed chest
cardiac compression
Emergency Medical Services
Individual Protective Equipment

Natural Events
Avalanches
Cyclones
Droughts
Earthquakes
Dust
Sand Storm
Epidemic Diseases

Natural Disaster
Famines
Floods
Heat waves
Hail Storms
Hurricanes(Katrina, Rita)

Natural Disasters
Land Slides
Severe Storms
Tornados
Tsunamis
Volcanic Eruptions

Man-made Disasters
Air Safety
Fire Emergencies
Nuclear Accidents & Radiation
(blast, heat)
Hazardous material (chemical &
biological)
Bioterrorism
Conflict / Terrorism

BCW: possible weapons
against humans
Biological Agents:
Bacteria
Bacillus Anthracis
Brucella Species
Bartonella QuintanaVibrio Cholerare
Plague
Fungi
-Coccidiodes immitis
Viruses
-Hanta virus
-Ebola virus
-Smallpox
Protozoa
-Naeglaeria fowleri

BCW
Routes of exposure
Inhalation hazard (Respiratory System)
Contact hazard (Skin)
Digestive system (contaminated food or
drinking water)
Degree of hazardwill depend on the agent &
amount released/method by which agent is
disseminated
Biological agentshave the ability to multiply
in the host
Chemical agentsmay be harassing agents,
incapacitating agents or lethal agents

Recent Outbreaks & Incidents
Hurricane (the USA)
Avian Flu (Hong Kong)
Earthquakes (Pakistan)
Floods (Bangladesh)
Mad Cow Disease (the UK)
Marburg Virus Hemorrhagic Fever
Anthrax (the USA)
Tsunamis (Indonesia, Sri Lanka)
SARS (30 countries)

Earthquakes
Surviving an earthquake and
reducing its health impact
requires preparation, planning,
and practice.
Far in advance, you can gather
emergency supplies, identify and
reduce possible hazards in your
home, and practice what to do
during and after an earthquake.

How are avian, pandemic, and seasonal flu
different?
Avian Fluis caused by avian influenza
viruses, which occur naturally among
birds.
Pandemic Fluis flu that causes a global
outbreak, or pandemic, of serious illness
that spreads easily from person to
person.
Seasonal Fluis a contagious respiratory
illness caused by influenza viruses

What Injuries Occur Most Often?
The most severe injuries in
mass casualty events are
fractures, burns, lacerations,
and crush injuries. However,
the most common injuries
are eye injuries, sprains,
strains, minor wounds, and
ear damage.

Impact of Disasters
Disasters have a major impact on
the living conditions, economic
performance and environmental
assets and services of affected
countries or regions.
Consequences may be long term and
may even irreversibly affect
economic and social structures and
the environment

Impact
In industrialized countries, disasters cause
massive damage to the large stock of
accumulated capital while losses of human
life are limited due to the availability of
effective early warning and evacuation
systems, as well as better urban planning
and the application of strict building codes
and standards.
In developing countries, on the other
hand, fatalities are usually higher
owing to the lack or inadequacy of
forecast and evacuation programmes.

Impact
Whether disasters are essentially natural or
man-made in origin, their consequences
derive from a combination of human action
and interaction with nature’s cycles or
systems.
Disasters can lead to widespread loss of life,
directly and indirectly (primarily or
secondarily) affect large segments of the
population and cause significant
environmental damage and large -scale
economic and social harm
the deterioration in the social well-being of the
population

Disaster Management
EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS

Goal of
Emergency Preparedness
To reduce:
loss of lives
damage to property
impact on environment
impact on community

Activation of External
Disaster Plan
Information from the Red
Crescent Ambulance authorities
Arrival of casualties without prior
warning
Doctor on Duty to inform ED Chief
ED Chief to contact the Disaster
Executive Committee (Hospital
Director, Executive Director,
Medical Director, Nursing
Director)

Activation of External
Disaster Plan
Disaster Executive Committee
[DEC] will assess the situation &
determine the activation of the
plan
DEC to initiate Code Black/Green
through the Switchboard
Switchboard will start Page
announcement for Code Black,
Bleep 555 for all concerned

Activation of DM Plan
Beep to Transport Department for
arranging 2 Ambulances
Advise Transport Section to send
Ambulances around the hospital
housing to alert residents about
disaster
To send cars to commute staff
Contact all other DM personnel
Inform Nursing Director to arrange
nurses

Activation of the plan
Chief of each department to arrange
return of off-duty personnel
Ambulance to commute 2 medical teams
(disaster Site triage team) to site of
disaster
Other departments (radiology, Labs,
Blood Bank, Pharmacy, Medical Records,
Patient Services, Security, Emergency
Supplies, Nutrition, etc will activate their
DM plan
Security personnel to regulate traffic to
& from the Reception area

Main Disaster Teams
RESPONSIBILITIES

Disaster Executive
Committee
Coordination all Disaster Management
activates
Coordinate all aspects of clinical
management
Notify local authorities
Receive regular updated progress of DM
Media management
To announce ‘All Clear’ at the end of
Disaster

Coordination Team
Assess the number of casualties
& Beds available
Maintain contact with Triage
teams, Treatment teams & wards
Allocate Medical staff in different
teams
Give updated info to Disaster &
Executive Committee

Disaster Site Triage Team
Triaging patients (Red, Yellow,
Green, Black) to give priorities
for evacuation
Inform the Disaster Executive
Committee about the situation to
take decision for activation of
Disaster Plan
Give frequent updates on the
situation at the scene

Hospital Triage Team
Receiving the Disaster
Patients
Screening (Triaging)
Transferring all incoming
disaster patients to
different treatment areas

Red Area Team
To resuscitate, stabilize
patients on red area and
shifting them to
definitive care areas

Yellow Area Team
To resuscitate and stabilize
patients with serious non life-
threatening injuries
Provide care to those patients
who are seriously injured and
likely to die
Transferring resuscitated
patients to definitive care areas

Green Area Team
Care of patients with
minimal injuries

ED Patients Team
Treating of the
normal ED patients

Evacuation Team
Making beds available for
casualties from the
disaster by bed expansion
and discharging current
cold patients

Evaluation Team
Monitoring the
management of the
disaster and forward a
final report to the Chief of
the Disaster Management
Committee.

Triage Team
Hospital triage is team
responsible for:
receiving the disaster
patients
screening the disaster
patients
transferring all incoming
disaster patients to different
treatment areas

Responsibility of the Yellow area team
to resuscitate patients with serious
non-life threatening injuries
stabilize patients with serious non-
life threatening injuries
to provide care to those patients
who are seriously injured and likely
to die
transferring resuscitated patients
to definitive care areas

National Policy-making
Risk and vulnerability assessment
Development of training
programmes
Public health in disasters
The management of programmes
involving refugees and internally
displaced people
Shelter needs in disasters

National Policy-making
The development of disaster management
policy and plans
Aspects of the management of disasters
resulting from conflict
The role of the military in disaster
management
The management of civil emergencies and
transport accidents
Co-ordination in disaster management
The establishment of control rooms

National Policy-making
Leadership and decision making
in disaster management
Managing incidents involving
terrorism or civil unrest
Crowd management
The development context of
disaster management
Disaster relief logistics

CBW
Identify the hazard
Evaluate the hazard
Introduce risk reduction strategies
(control contamination)
Chemical detection & identification (lab
dx. By DNA based & other molecular
methods)
Risk communication & dissemination of
information
Contamination control (entry & exit
control)

BCW
Decontaminate both materials &
persons
Triage
Medical care & evaluation of
casualties
Definitive decontamination (a
final decontamination of the site)
Command, control &
communication

Taste of Tears

THE CHANGING FACE OF
DISASTER MANAGEMENT

The confirmed death toll from the 7.6-magnitude
earthquake that was centered near Muzaffarabad,
the capital of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir (PcK) on
October 8 stands at over 73,000 in Pck and in
NWFP, while the unconfirmed death toll has climbed
to over 86,000. (Nov-8, AP, Dawn) Over 79,000
people injured and estimated 3 million displaced or
homeless. The earthquake affected nine districts in
total: Abbottabad, Batagram, Mansehra, Shangla,
and Kohistan in the North West Frontier Province
(NWFP) and Muzaffarabad, Neelum, Poonch and
Bagh in PcK.

India
The latest official death toll is 1,309 in Indian-
controlled Kashmir (IcK). Officially, 6,622
people reportedly injured and 150,000
displaced (Oct-17, AFP). Worst-hit areas are
around Tangdhar and Uri towns in Kupwara
and Baramulla districts respectively, along
the disputed Line of Control (LoC). Third
worst-hit area is Poonch district.

Tsunami
The overall focus of attention is on rebuilding and long-term recovery
and rehabilitation for the December 26, 2004 earthquake and tsunami
disaster. The dead and missing toll from tsunamis triggered by the
undersea earthquake measuring 9.0 on the Richter scale off the west
coast of Indonesia’s Sumatra Island was estimated to be some 232,000
people along the coastal areas of 12 countries in the Indian Ocean,
although a true toll will likely never be known. At least 1.7 million are
reported to be homeless with estimates over 2 million. Tsunami-related
deaths were recorded in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, Thailand,
Malaysia, Myanmar, Maldives, Bangladesh, Somalia, Tanzania, Kenya
and the Seychelles. The loss of life was particularly severe in
Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India and Thailand. Nearly 166,000 dead and
missing are from worst-hit Aceh province in Indonesia. The dead and
missing toll in Sri Lanka is nearly 39,000. In India, at least 10,672 died
in Tamil Nadu State and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The death
toll in Thailand is around 5,400, including about 1,953 foreigners from at
least 36 countries. More than 400 combined deaths have been reported
in the other countries.

South Asia Earthquake
January 2005

South Asia earthquake (India)

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Asian Earthquake 2005

Natural Disaster

Pakistan: Villages wiped
out

Bodies recovered

Asian Earthquake:
Grim situation

Tsunami Catastrophe
2004-05

Tsunami: Satellite photos

Tsunami December 26
2004

Tsunami 2004/5: Indian Ocean

Tsunami: Indonesia

Tsunami

Tsunami Disaster of Indian
Ocean 2005
It is said that some kids were
playing on a bridge when
suddenly the earthquake came,
the bridge broke down into 2
pieces, all those kids went down
inside the bridge and died. The
mothers of those kids were
standing besides the bridge and
helplessly watching their kids
die.

Iraq Tsunami: body in
mortuary

Iraq: legs eaten by dogs

Iraq: a dead woman covered