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1.
J Public Health Manag Pract ; 29(2): 241-249, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36126217

RESUMEN

CONTEXT: Lead exposure can harm nearly every organ in the human body. Millions of US children are exposed to lead hazards. Identifying lead-exposed children using blood lead testing is essential for connecting them to appropriate follow-up services. However, blood lead testing is not consistently conducted for at-risk children. Thus, determining which policies help improve blood lead testing rates is essential. OBJECTIVE: This analysis provides critical evidence to better understand which state-level policies are more effective at increasing childhood blood lead testing rates. These include metrics, incentives, other managed care organization guidance, provider guidelines, mandatory reporting of results to state health departments, data sharing between Medicaid and other state agencies, and proof of testing for school enrollment. DESIGN: This analysis included 33 states with complete data on the number of children tested for blood lead in 2017-2018 as reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Linear regression modeling was conducted to examine associations between testing rates and the aforementioned policies. Fully adjusted models included percentages of the population living in pre-1980 housing, younger than 6 years with Medicaid coverage, and foreign-born. RESULTS: Strongest unadjusted and adjusted regression coefficients were observed for requiring proof of testing for school enrollment (ß = .12, P = .03) and metrics (ß = .06, P = .01), respectively. CONCLUSION: Policies associated with higher childhood blood lead testing rates can be used by policy makers; local, state, and federal public health agencies; professional organizations; nonprofit organizations; and others to inform development and implementation of additional policies to increase childhood blood lead testing.


Asunto(s)
Benchmarking , Políticas , Estados Unidos , Humanos , Niño , Medicaid , Tamizaje Masivo , Vigilancia de la Población/métodos
3.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33670135

RESUMEN

The human casualties from simulated nuclear detonation scenarios in New Delhi, India are analyzed, with a focus on the distribution of casualties in urban environments and the theoretical application of a nuclear-specific triage system with significant innovation in interdisciplinary disaster management applicable generally to urban nuclear detonation medical response. Model estimates of nuclear war casualties employed ESRI's ArcGIS 9.3, blast and prompt radiation were calculated using the Defense Nuclear Agency's WE program, and fallout radiation was calculated using the Defense Threat Reduction Agency's (DTRA's) Hazard Prediction and Assessment Capability (HPAC) V404SP4, as well as custom GIS and database software applications. ESRI ArcGISTM programs were used to calculate affected populations from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory's LandScanTM 2007 Global Population Dataset for areas affected by thermal, blast and radiation data. Trauma, thermal burn, and radiation casualties were thus estimated on a geographic basis for New Delhi, India for single and multiple (six) 25 kt detonations and a single 1 mt (1000 kt) detonation. Major issues related to the emergency management of a nuclear incident are discussed with specific recommendations for improvement. The consequences for health management of thermal burn and radiation patients is the worst, as burn patients require enormous resources to treat, and there will be little to no familiarity with the treatment of radiation victims. Of particular importance is the interdisciplinary cooperation necessary for such a large-scale emergency response event, which would be exemplified by efforts such as the application of a Nuclear Global Health Workforce.


Asunto(s)
Planificación en Desastres , Desastres , Explosiones , Humanos , India , Triaje
4.
Confl Health ; 13: 9, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30962816

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Instability in the global geopolitical climate and the continuing spread of nuclear weapons and increase in their lethality has made the exchange of nuclear weapons or a terrorist attack upon a nuclear power plant a serious issue that demands appropriate planning for response. In response to this threat, the development of a nuclear global health workforce under the technical expertise of the International Atomic Energy Agency and the World Health Organization Radiation Emergency Medical Preparedness and Assistance Network has been proposed. MAIN BODY OF THE ABSTRACT: As the largest component of the global healthcare workforce, nurses will play a critical role in both the leadership and health care effectiveness of a response to any public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) resulting from the unprecedented numbers of trauma, thermal burn, and radiation affected patients that will require extensive involvement of the nursing professional community. SHORT CONCLUSION: Lives can and will be saved if nurses are present. The clinical care of radiation contaminated patients (e.g. radiation burns, fluid management, infection control), thermal burn patients, and other health system response activities such as community screening for radiation exposure, triage, decontamination, administration of medical countermeasures and the provision of supportive emotional and mental health care will be overwhelmingly nurse intensive.

5.
Health Secur ; 16(3): 213-215, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29641266

RESUMEN

On January 13, 2018, Hawaii experienced an erroneous alert that falsely warned of an imminent ballistic missile strike. Rather than focus on the inconvenience caused by the false alert, we used reporting of the event to identify the missing elements that would characterize a system that could save lives by alerting and informing the public in a nuclear detonation. These include warnings that contain essential information rather than directing recipients to secondary sources; a system that issues alerts directly from federal agencies that will have the earliest warning; a robust multimodal alerting system that can deliver messages before and after the detonation; and swift activation of federal agencies immediately upon warning.


Asunto(s)
Defensa Civil/métodos , Comunicación , Planificación en Desastres/organización & administración , Guerra Nuclear/prevención & control , Defensa Civil/organización & administración , Hawaii , Humanos
6.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 12(5): 554-562, 2018 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29540245

RESUMEN

In the U.S., migration has been documented to affect the prevalence of infectious disease. As a mitigation entity, border security has been recorded by numerous scholarly works as being essential to the support of the health of the U.S. population. Consequently, the lack of current health care monitoring of the permeable U.S. border places the U.S. population at risk in the broad sectors of infectious disease and interpersonal violence. Visualizing border security in the context of public health mitigation has significant potential to protect migrant health as well as that of all populations on both sides of the border. Examples of how commonly this philosophy is held can be found in the expansive use of security-focused terms regarding public health. Using tools such as GIS to screen for disease in people before their entrance into a nation would be more efficient and ethical than treating patients once they have entered a population and increased the impact on the healthcare system. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2018;12:554-562).


Asunto(s)
Brotes de Enfermedades/prevención & control , Emigración e Inmigración , Medidas de Seguridad/tendencias , Humanos , Prevalencia , Estados Unidos
7.
Front Public Health ; 5: 202, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28868272

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Among medical providers, even though radiological and nuclear events are recognized as credible threats, there is a lack of knowledge and fear about the medical consequences among medical personnel which could significantly affect the treatment of patients injured and/or contaminated in such scenarios. This study was conducted to evaluate the relative knowledge, willingness to respond, and familiarity with nuclear/radiological contamination risks among U.S. and Japanese emergency medical personnel. METHODS: An institutional review board-approved anonymous paper survey was distributed at various medical and disaster conferences and medicine courses in Japan and in the U.S. The surveys were written in Japanese and English and collected information on the following four categories: generalized demographics, willingness to manage, knowledge of disaster systems, and contamination risks. RESULTS: A total of 418 surveys were completed and collected. Demographics showed that physicians and prehospital responders were the prevalent survey responders. The majority of responders, despite self-professed disaster training, were still very uncomfortable with and unaware how to respond to a radiological/nuclear event. CONCLUSION: Despite some educational coverage in courses and a limited number of disaster events, it is concluded that there is a lack of comfort and knowledge regarding nuclear and radiological events among the medical community. It is recommended that considerable development and subsequent distribution is needed to better educate and prepare the medical community for inevitable upcoming radiological/nuclear events.

8.
Confl Health ; 11: 13, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28781608

RESUMEN

Major challenges and crises in global health will not be solved by health alone; requiring rather a multidisciplinary, evidence-based analytical approach to prevention, preparedness and response. One such potential crisis is the continued spread of nuclear weapons to more nations concurrent with the increased volatility of international relations that has significantly escalated the risk of a major nuclear weapon exchange. This study argues for the development of a multidisciplinary global health response agenda based on the reality of the current political analysis of nuclear risk, research evidence suggesting higher-than-expected survivability risk, and the potential for improved health outcomes based on medical advances. To date, the medical consequences of such an exchange are not credibly addressed by any nation at this time, despite recent advances. While no one country could mount such a response, an international body of responders organized in the same fashion as the current World Health Organization's global health workforce initiative for large-scale natural and public health emergencies could enlist and train for just such an emergency. A Nuclear Global Health Workforce is described for addressing the unprecedented medical and public health needs to be expected in the event of a nuclear conflict or catastrophic accident. The example of addressing mass casualty nuclear thermal burns outlines the potential triage and clinical response management of survivors enabled by this global approach.

9.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 10(1): 152-6, 2016 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26193904

RESUMEN

The summer of 2006 in northern Israel served as the battleground for the second war against Hezbollah based along Israel's border with southern Lebanon. Western Galilee Hospital (WGH), which is located only 6 miles from the Lebanese border, served as a major medical center in the vicinity of the fighting. The hospital was directly impacted by Hezbollah with a Katyusha rocket, which struck the ophthalmology department on the 4th floor. WGH was able to utilize a 450-bed underground facility that maintained full hospital functionality throughout the conflict. In a major feat of rapid evacuation, the entire hospital population was relocated under the cover of darkness to these bunkers in just over 1 hour, thus emptying the building prior to the missile impact. Over half of the patients presenting during the conflict did not incur physical injury but qualified as acute stress disorder patients. The particulars of this evacuation remain unique owing to the extraordinary circumstances, but many of the principles employed in this maneuver may serve as a template for other hospitals requiring emergency evacuation. Hospital functionality drastically changed to accommodate the operational reality of war, and many of these tactics warrant closer investigation for possible implementation in other conflict zones.


Asunto(s)
Personal de Salud/psicología , Hospitales/tendencias , Incidentes con Víctimas en Masa/psicología , Estrés Psicológico/psicología , Guerra , Refugio de Emergencia , Humanos , Israel/epidemiología , Incidentes con Víctimas en Masa/estadística & datos numéricos , Trastornos por Estrés Postraumático/complicaciones , Trastornos por Estrés Postraumático/psicología , Estrés Psicológico/complicaciones
10.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 10(1): 129-44, 2016 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26527407

RESUMEN

This study argues that any nuclear weapon exchange or major nuclear plant meltdown, in the categories of human systems failure and conflict-based crises, will immediately provoke an unprecedented public health emergency of international concern. Notwithstanding nuclear triage and management plans and technical monitoring standards within the International Atomic Energy Agency and the World Health Organization (WHO), the capacity to rapidly deploy a robust professional workforce with the internal coordination and collaboration capabilities required for large-scale nuclear crises is profoundly lacking. A similar dilemma, evident in the early stages of the Ebola epidemic, was eventually managed by using worldwide infectious disease experts from the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network and multiple multidisciplinary WHO-supported foreign medical teams. This success has led the WHO to propose the development of a Global Health Workforce. A strategic format is proposed for nuclear preparedness and response that builds and expands on the current model for infectious disease outbreak currently under consideration. This study proposes the inclusion of a nuclear global health workforce under the technical expertise of the International Atomic Energy Agency and WHO's Radiation Emergency Medical Preparedness and Assistance Network leadership and supported by the International Health Regulations Treaty. Rationales are set forth for the development, structure, and function of a nuclear workforce based on health outcomes research that define the unique health, health systems, and public health challenges of a nuclear crisis. Recent research supports that life-saving opportunities are possible, but only if a rapidly deployed and robust multidisciplinary response component exists.


Asunto(s)
Planificación en Desastres/métodos , Salud Global , Agencias Internacionales/tendencias , Grupo de Atención al Paciente , Liberación de Radiactividad Peligrosa/prevención & control , Síndrome de Radiación Aguda/patología , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Cooperación Internacional , Armas Nucleares/estadística & datos numéricos
11.
Am J Disaster Med ; 10(3): 177-88, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26663302

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: A predictive system was developed and tested in a series of exercises with the objective of evaluating the preparedness and effectiveness of the multiagency response to food terrorism attacks. DESIGN: A computerized simulation model, Risk Reduction Effectiveness and Capabilities Assessment Program (RRECAP), was developed to identify the key factors that influence the outcomes of an attack and quantify the relative reduction of such outcomes caused by each factor. SETTING: The model was evaluated in a set of Tabletop and Full-Scale Exercises that simulate biological and chemical attacks on the food system. PARTICIPANTS: More than 300 participants representing more than 60 federal, state, local, and private sector agencies and organizations. RESULTS: The exercises showed that agencies could use RRECAP to identify and prioritize their advance preparation to mitigate such attacks with minimal expense. RRECAP also demonstrated the relative utility and limitations of the ability of medical resources to treat patients if responders do not recognize and mitigate the attack rapidly, and the exercise results showed that proper advance preparation would reduce these deficiencies. CONCLUSIONS: Using computer simulation prediction of the medical outcomes of food supply attacks to identify optimal remediation activities and quantify the benefits of various measures provides a significant tool to agencies in both the public and private sector as they seek to prepare for such an attack.


Asunto(s)
Defensa Civil , Planificación en Desastres , Abastecimiento de Alimentos/normas , Terrorismo/prevención & control , Benchmarking , Defensa Civil/métodos , Defensa Civil/normas , Planificación en Desastres/métodos , Planificación en Desastres/normas , Humanos , Modelos Teóricos , Salud Pública , Medición de Riesgo , Estados Unidos
12.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 9(6): 681-9, 2015 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26545189

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: We designed and conducted a regional full-scale exercise in 2007 to test the ability of Atlanta-area hospitals and community partners to respond to a terrorist attack involving the coordinated release of 2 dangerous chemicals (toluene diisocyanate and parathion) that were being transported through the area by tanker truck. METHODS: The exercise was designed to facilitate the activation of hospital emergency response plans and to test applicable triage, decontamination, and communications protocols. Plume modeling was conducted by using the Defense Threat Reduction Agency's (DTRA) Hazard Prediction and Assessment Capability (HPAC) V4 program. The scenario went through multiple iterations as exercise planners sought to reduce total injuries to a manageable, but stressful, level for Atlanta's health care infrastructure. RESULTS: Atlanta-area hospitals rapidly performed multiple casualty triage and were able to take in a surge of victims from the simulated attack. However, health care facilities were reticent to push the perceived manageable numbers of victims, and scenarios were modified significantly to lower the magnitude of the simulated attack. Additional coordination with community response partners and incident command training is recommended. Security at health care facilities and decontamination of arriving victims are two areas that will require continued review. CONCLUSION: Atlanta-area hospitals participated in an innovative regional exercise that pushed facilities beyond traditional scopes of practice and brought together numerous health care community response partners. Using lessons learned from this exercise coupled with subsequent real-world events and training exercises, participants have significantly enhanced preparedness levels and increased the metropolitan region's medical surge capacity in the case of a multiple casualty disaster.


Asunto(s)
Liberación de Peligros Químicos , Hospitales/normas , Capacidad de Reacción/normas , Terrorismo Químico , Descontaminación/métodos , Planificación en Desastres/métodos , Georgia , Planificación Hospitalaria/normas , Humanos , Incidentes con Víctimas en Masa , Vehículos a Motor , Triaje/estadística & datos numéricos
14.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 7(6): 563-72, 2013 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24112433

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: Numerous practice reports recommend roles pharmacists may adopt during disasters. This study examines the peer-reviewed literature for factors that explain the roles pharmacists assume in disasters and the differences in roles and disasters when stratified by time. METHODS: Quantitative content analysis was used to gather data consisting of words and phrases from peer-reviewed pharmacy literature regarding pharmacists' roles in disasters. Negative binomial regression and Kruskal-Wallis nonparametric models were applied to the data. RESULTS: Pharmacists' roles in disasters have not changed significantly since the 1960s. Pharmaceutical supply remains their preferred role, while patient management and response integration roles decrease in context of common, geographically widespread disasters. Policy coordination roles, however, significantly increase in nuclear terrorism planning. CONCLUSIONS: Pharmacists' adoption of nonpharmaceutical supply roles may represent a problem of accepting a paradigm shift in nontraditional roles. Possible shortages of personnel in future disasters may change the pharmacists' approach to disaster management.


Asunto(s)
Desastres , Servicios Médicos de Urgencia/organización & administración , Administración del Tratamiento Farmacológico/organización & administración , Servicios Farmacéuticos/organización & administración , Farmacéuticos/normas , Bibliometría , Servicios Médicos de Urgencia/métodos , Guías como Asunto , Humanos , Administración del Tratamiento Farmacológico/normas , Administración del Tratamiento Farmacológico/tendencias , Servicios Farmacéuticos/estadística & datos numéricos , Farmacéuticos/organización & administración , Farmacéuticos/estadística & datos numéricos , Rol Profesional , Recursos Humanos
15.
Confl Health ; 7(1): 10, 2013 May 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23663406

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The proliferation of nuclear technology in the politically volatile Middle East greatly increases the likelihood of a catastrophic nuclear war. It is widely accepted, while not openly declared, that Israel has nuclear weapons, and that Iran has enriched enough nuclear material to build them. The medical consequences of a nuclear exchange between Iran and Israel in the near future are envisioned, with a focus on the distribution of casualties in urban environments. METHODS: Model estimates of nuclear war casualties employed ESRI's ArcGIS 9.3, blast and prompt radiation were calculated using the Defense Nuclear Agency's WE program, and fallout radiation was calculated using the Defense Threat Reduction Agency's (DTRA's) Hazard Prediction and Assessment Capability (HPAC) V404SP4, as well as custom GIS and database software applications. Further development for thermal burn casualties was based on Brode, as modified by Binninger, to calculate thermal fluence. ESRI ArcGISTM programs were used to calculate affected populations from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory's LandScanTM 2007 Global Population Dataset for areas affected by thermal, blast and radiation data. RESULTS: Trauma, thermal burn, and radiation casualties were thus estimated on a geographic basis for three Israeli and eighteen Iranian cities. Nuclear weapon detonations in the densely populated cities of Iran and Israel will result in an unprecedented millions of numbers of dead, with millions of injured suffering without adequate medical care, a broad base of lingering mental health issues, a devastating loss of municipal infrastructure, long-term disruption of economic, educational, and other essential social activity, and a breakdown in law and order. CONCLUSIONS: This will cause a very limited medical response initially for survivors in Iran and Israel. Strategic use of surviving medical response and collaboration with international relief could be expedited by the predicted casualty distributions and locations. The consequences for health management of thermal burn and radiation patients is the worst, as burn patients require enormous resources to treat, and there will be little to no familiarity with the treatment of radiation victims. Any rational analysis of a nuclear war between Iran and Israel reveals the utterly unacceptable outcomes for either nation.

16.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 6(4): 330-4, 2012 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23241462

RESUMEN

The Chernobyl disaster in 1986 involved the largest airborne release of radioactivity in history, more than 100 times as much radioactivity as the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombs together. The resulting emergency response, administrative blunders, and subsequent patient outcomes from this large-scale radiological disaster provide a wealth of information and valuable lessons for those who may find themselves having to deal with the staggering consequences of nuclear war. Research findings, administrative strategies (successful and otherwise), and resulting clinical procedures from the Chernobyl experience are reviewed to determine a current utility in addressing the appropriate protocols for a medical response to nuclear war. As various myths are still widely associated with radiation exposure, attention is given to the realities of a mass casualty medical response as it would occur with a nuclear detonation.


Asunto(s)
Accidente Nuclear de Chernóbil , Desastres , Servicios Médicos de Urgencia/organización & administración , Traumatismos por Radiación/epidemiología , Humanos , Incidentes con Víctimas en Masa , Reactores Nucleares , Traumatismos por Radiación/prevención & control , Triaje/organización & administración
17.
Int J Environ Res Public Health ; 9(8): 2936-48, 2012 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23066407

RESUMEN

Radioactive iodide ((131)I-) protection studies have focused primarily on the thyroid gland and disturbances in the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis. The objective of the current study was to establish (131)I- urinary excretion profiles for saline, and the thyroid protectants, potassium iodide (KI) and ammonium perchlorate over a 75 hour time-course. Rats were administered (131)I- and 3 hours later dosed with either saline, 30 mg/kg of NH(4)ClO(4) or 30 mg/kg of KI. Urinalysis of the first 36 hours of the time-course revealed that NH(4)ClO(4) treated animals excreted significantly more (131)I- compared with KI and saline treatments. A second study followed the same protocol, but thyroxine (T(4)) was administered daily over a 3 day period. During the first 6-12 hour after (131)I- dosing, rats administered NH(4)ClO(4) excreted significantly more (131)I- than the other treatment groups. T(4) treatment resulted in increased retention of radioiodide in the thyroid gland 75 hour after (131)I- administration. We speculate that the T(4) treatment related reduction in serum TSH caused a decrease synthesis and secretion of thyroid hormones resulting in greater residual radioiodide in the thyroid gland. Our findings suggest that ammonium perchlorate treatment accelerates the elimination rate of radioiodide within the first 24 to 36 hours and thus may be more effective at reducing harmful exposure to (131)I- compared to KI treatment for repeated dosing situations. Repeated dosing studies are needed to compare the effectiveness of these treatments to reduce the radioactive iodide burden of the thyroid gland.


Asunto(s)
Yodo/orina , Percloratos/uso terapéutico , Yoduro de Potasio/uso terapéutico , Compuestos de Amonio Cuaternario/uso terapéutico , Traumatismos por Radiación/prevención & control , Enfermedades de la Tiroides/prevención & control , Animales , Yodo/sangre , Yodo/farmacocinética , Radioisótopos de Yodo/sangre , Radioisótopos de Yodo/farmacocinética , Radioisótopos de Yodo/orina , Masculino , Percloratos/sangre , Percloratos/orina , Ratas , Ratas Sprague-Dawley , Glándula Tiroides/metabolismo , Tirotropina/sangre
18.
Prehosp Disaster Med ; 26(5): 383-5, 2011 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22509536

RESUMEN

Once again, the politically volatile Middle East and accompanying rhetoric has escalated the risk of a major nuclear exchange. Diplomatic efforts have failed to make the medical consequences of such an exchange a leading element in negotiations. The medical and academic communities share this denial. Without exaggeration, the harsh reality of the enormous consequences of an imminently conceivable nuclear war between Iran and Israel will encompass an unprecedented millions of dead and an unavoidable decline in public health and environmental devastation that would impact major populations in the Middle East for decades to come. Nuclear deterrence and the uncomfortable but real medical and public health consequences must become an integral part of a broader global health diplomacy that emphasizes health security along with poverty reduction and good governance.


Asunto(s)
Guerra Nuclear , Planificación en Desastres , Salud Global , Humanos , Medio Oriente , Salud Pública
19.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 2(1): 57-68, 2008 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18388659

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Various organizations and universities have developed competencies for health professionals and other emergency responders. Little effort has been devoted to the integration of these competencies across health specialties and professions. The American Medical Association Center for Public Health Preparedness and Disaster Response convened an expert working group (EWG) to review extant competencies and achieve consensus on an educational framework and competency set from which educators could devise learning objectives and curricula tailored to fit the needs of all health professionals in a disaster. METHODS: The EWG conducted a systematic review of peer-reviewed and non-peer reviewed published literature. In addition, after-action reports from Hurricane Katrina and relevant publications recommended by EWG members and other subject matter experts were reviewed for congruencies and gaps. Consensus was ensured through a 3-stage Delphi process. RESULTS: The EWG process developed a new educational framework for disaster medicine and public health preparedness based on consensus identification of 7 core learning domains, 19 core competencies, and 73 specific competencies targeted at 3 broad health personnel categories. CONCLUSIONS: The competencies can be applied to a wide range of health professionals who are expected to perform at different levels (informed worker/student, practitioner, leader) according to experience, professional role, level of education, or job function. Although these competencies strongly reflect lessons learned following the health system response to Hurricane Katrina, it must be understood that preparedness is a process, and that these competencies must be reviewed continually and refined over time.


Asunto(s)
Competencia Clínica , Consenso , Medicina de Desastres/educación , Medicina de Desastres/normas , Competencia Profesional , Salud Pública , Humanos , Estados Unidos
20.
Int J Health Geogr ; 6: 5, 2007 Feb 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17328796

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The threat posed by the use of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) within the United States has grown significantly in recent years, focusing attention on the medical and public health disaster capabilities of the nation in a large scale crisis. While the hundreds of thousands or millions of casualties resulting from a nuclear weapon would, in and of itself, overwhelm our current medical response capabilities, the response dilemma is further exacerbated in that these resources themselves would be significantly at risk. There are many limitations on the resources needed for mass casualty management, such as access to sufficient hospital beds including specialized beds for burn victims, respiration and supportive therapy, pharmaceutical intervention, and mass decontamination. RESULTS: The effects of 20 kiloton and 550 kiloton nuclear detonations on high priority target cities are presented for New York City, Chicago, Washington D.C. and Atlanta. Thermal, blast and radiation effects are described, and affected populations are calculated using 2000 block level census data. Weapons of 100 Kts and up are primarily incendiary or radiation weapons, able to cause burns and start fires at distances greater than they can significantly damage buildings, and to poison populations through radiation injuries well downwind in the case of surface detonations. With weapons below 100 Kts, blast effects tend to be stronger than primary thermal effects from surface bursts. From the point of view of medical casualty treatment and administrative response, there is an ominous pattern where these fatalities and casualties geographically fall in relation to the location of hospital and administrative facilities. It is demonstrated that a staggering number of the main hospitals, trauma centers, and other medical assets are likely to be in the fatality plume, rendering them essentially inoperable in a crisis. CONCLUSION: Among the consequences of this outcome would be the probable loss of command-and-control, mass casualties that will have to be treated in an unorganized response by hospitals on the periphery, as well as other expected chaotic outcomes from inadequate administration in a crisis. Vigorous, creative, and accelerated training and coordination among the federal agencies tasked for WMD response, military resources, academic institutions, and local responders will be critical for large-scale WMD events involving mass casualties.


Asunto(s)
Planificación en Desastres/métodos , Guerra Nuclear/prevención & control , Terrorismo/prevención & control , Chicago , Ciudades/epidemiología , Planificación en Desastres/tendencias , District of Columbia , Sistemas de Comunicación entre Servicios de Urgencia/tendencias , Georgia , Humanos , Ciudad de Nueva York , Guerra Nuclear/tendencias , Terrorismo/tendencias , Servicios Urbanos de Salud
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