Health & Medical Question

For this week’s discussion, you are asked to research a bioterrorist disaster. Begin by reviewing the content of this week’s module, then research for a bioterrorist disaster. Be sure you have chosen a biological agent, not a chemical agent (see the textbook for assistance).

Give an example and details from a bioterrorist attack. (You can use any bioterrorist attack except for the 2001 Anthrax attacks in the US).

Address all of the following in your post:

What was the classification of biological agent used in the attack? (Categories A, B, and C; see the textbook for assistance)

Discuss the implications or clinical manifestations of the biological agent chosen.

Discuss the therapy for the biological agent.

What are the decontamination procedures (for person exposed) for the biological agent used in the attack?

  • Define the appropriate level of PPE required for this type of biological agent?
  • Support your answer with evidence from scholarly sources (reference and cite your sources).
  • Per FEMA: Emergency vs. Disaster

  • The terms emergency and disaster are often used interchangeably. This common use of terms can be confusing. It is easiest to understand the terms emergency and disaster as being at two ends of a scale, in which the size of an incident and the resources to deal with the incident are matched to varying degrees. Emergency at one end of the spectrum, emergencies are generally small-scale, localized incidents that are resolved quickly using local resources. However, small-scale emergencies can escalate into disasters when there has been inadequate planning and wasteful use of resources. At the other end of the spectrum, disasters are typically large-scale and cross geographic, political, and academic boundaries. Disasters require a level of response and recovery greater than local communities can provide.
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    About the Editor
    Tener Goodwin Veenema, PhD, MPH, MS, CPNP,
    is an Associate Professor of Clinical Nursing, Assistant
    Professor of Emergency Medicine, and Program Director
    for Disaster Nursing and Strategic Initiatives at the Center for Disaster Medicine and Emergency Preparedness
    at the University of Rochester School of Nursing and
    School of Medicine and Dentistry. Dr. Veenema is also
    President and Chief Executive Officer of the TenER Consulting Group, LLC, which provides consultation and
    workforce development for emergency preparedness to
    federal, state agencies, and corporate organizations. She
    has received numerous awards and research grants for
    her work, and in June 2004, Dr. Veenema was elected
    into the National Academies of Practice and was selected as a 2004 Robert Wood Johnson Executive Nurse
    Fellow. In 2006, Dr. Veenema was the recipient of the
    Klainer Entrepreneurial Award in health care.
    Dr. Veenema received her Bachelor of Science degree in Nursing from Columbia University in 1980 and
    went on to obtain a Master of Science in Nursing Administration (1992) and a Master in Public Health (1999)
    from the University of Rochester School of Medicine
    and Dentistry. In 2001, she earned a PhD in Health Services Research and Policy from the same institution.
    Dr. Veenema is a nationally certified Pediatric Nurse
    Practitioner, and worked for many years in the Pediatric Emergency Department at Strong Memorial Hospital (Rochester, New York).
    A highly successful author and editor, Dr. Veenema has published books and multiple articles on
    emergency nursing and disaster preparedness. The first
    edition of this textbook, published in August 2003, received an American Journal of Nursing Book-of-the-Year
    Award.
    Dr. Tener Goodwin Veenema, in her role as Chief Executive Officer of the TenER Consulting Group, LLC, is
    the author and developer of “ReadyRN: A Comprehensive Curriculum for Disaster Nursing and Emergency
    ii
    Preparedness” and collaborated with the American Red
    Cross to customize the ReadyRN curriculum for use
    by the American Red Cross in educating and training
    American Red Cross health care professionals in providing health-related disaster and emergency response
    services.
    Dr.Veenema’s ReadyRN Comprehensive Curriculum
    for Disaster Nursing and Emergency Preparedness was
    also published in 2007 as an innovative e-learning online
    course by Elsevier, and the companion ReadyRN Handbook for Disaster Nursing and Emergency Preparedness
    will be published in fall 2007.
    While at the University of Rochester, Dr. Veenema
    developed the curriculum for a 30-credit Masters program entitled “Leadership in Health Care Systems: Disaster Response and Emergency Management,” the first
    program of its kind in the country to be offered at a
    school of nursing. The program offers course content
    on the Fundamentals of Disaster Management, Chemical, Biological and Radiological Terrorism, Global Public
    Health and Complex Human Emergencies, Leadership
    and Strategic Decision Making, and Communication in
    Disaster Response and Emergency Preparedness.
    Dr. Veenema has served as a reviewer to the Institute of Medicine Committee on the Review Panel for
    the Smallpox Vaccination Implementation, Jane’s ChemBio Handbook, 2nd Edition, and serves on the editorial board for the journal Disaster Management and
    Response, sponsored by the Emergency Nurses Association. Dr. Veenema is an Associate Editor for the Journal
    of Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness,
    sponsored by the American Medical Association.
    Dr. Veenema frequently serves as a subject-matter
    expert for the National American Red Cross, multiple
    state health departments and nurses associations, as
    well as the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario,
    Canada. She is a member of the World Association of
    Disaster Medicine (WADEM).
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    Disaster
    Nursing and
    Emergency
    Preparedness
    for Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Terrorism
    and Other Hazards
    Second Edition
    EDITOR
    Tener Goodwin Veenema, PhD, MPH, MS, CPNP
    iii
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    C 2007 Springer Publishing Company, LLC
    Copyright 
    All rights reserved.
    No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
    transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying,
    recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Springer Publishing
    Company, LLC.
    Springer Publishing Company, LLC
    11 West 42nd Street
    New York, NY 10036–8002
    www.springerpub.com
    Acquisitions Editor: Sally J. Barhydt
    Production Editor: Matthew Byrd
    Cover Design: Mimi Flow
    Composition: Aptara
    07
    08
    09
    10/
    5
    4 3 2 1
    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
    Disaster nursing and emergency preparedness for chemical, biological, and radiological
    terrorism and other hazards / Tener Goodwin Veenema. – 2nd ed.
    p. ; cm.
    Includes bibliographical references and index.
    ISBN-13: 978-0-8261-2144-8
    ISBN-10: 0-8261-2144-6
    1. Disaster nursing. 2. Emergency nursing. I. Veenema, Tener Goodwin.
    [DNLM: 1. Disasters. 2. Emergency Nursing. 3. Terrorism. WY 154 D6109 2007]
    RT108.D56 2007
    616.02 5–dc22
    2007012380
    Printed in the United States of America by Bang Printing
    iv
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    Preface
    It is quite probable that at some time in the future, nurses
    may be called upon to respond to a mass casualty event
    or disaster outside of the hospital. Advance preparation
    of our national nursing workforce for such an event is
    predicted on the belief that mastery of the knowledge and
    skills needed to respond appropriately to such an event
    can improve patient outcomes.
    I wrote these words in the spring of 2002 as I finished the summary section of chapter 9 (p. 199) in the
    first edition of this book—3 1/2 years before Hurricane
    Katrina would wreak its devastation on the communities of the Gulf Coast. When the first edition of the
    book was released, our country was still reeling from the
    9/11 attacks and fearful of another outbreak of anthrax.
    These two events had resulted in an immediate awareness of our lack of national emergency preparedness and
    heightened vulnerability to disaster events. Health care
    providers were barraged by an onslaught of information
    from numerous sources (of varying quality) regarding
    topics such as disaster planning and response, biological agents, hazardous materials accidents, the dangers
    of radiation, therapeutics, and so forth. Resources on
    the Internet alone had increased exponentially. My own
    research on these topics had revealed that the existing
    disaster textbooks were written by and for physicians
    and public health officials. There was a major gap in the
    literature for nurses. Given the approximately 2.7 million nurses in this country, I found this to be not only
    unacceptable but a major threat to population health
    outcomes. Therefore, the genesis of the book was the desire to fill this gap in the literature and to provide nurses
    with a comprehensive resource that was evidence based
    whenever possible, and broad in scope and deep in detail. We were very successful and the first edition was extremely well received, garnering an AJN Book of the Year
    award along with multiple additional accolades, and for
    that I am eternally grateful. The book is currently being
    used nationwide by universities and schools of nursing,
    hospitals, public health departments, and multiple other
    sites where nurses work.
    The second edition of this textbook has an equally
    ambitious goal—to once again provide nurses and nurse
    practitioners with the most current, valid, and reliable
    information available for them to acquire the knowledge
    and skill set they will need to keep themselves, their patients, and families safe during any disaster event. Once
    again, we have held ourselves to the highest standards
    possible. Every chapter in the book has been researched,
    reviewed by experts, and matched to the highest standards for preparing health professions’ students for terrorism, disaster events, and public health emergencies.
    The framework of the book is consistent with the
    United States National Response Plan, the National Incident Management System, and is based on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Competencies for public health preparedness and the CDC
    Guidelines for response to chemical, biological, and radiological events. This textbook will provide nurses with
    a heightened awareness for disasters and mass casualty
    incidents, a solid foundation of knowledge (educational
    competencies) and a tool box of skills (occupational
    competencies) to respond in a timely and appropriate
    manner.
    Since September 11, 2001, our national concerns for
    the health and safety of our citizens has expanded to
    include additional hazards such as emerging infectious
    diseases (SARS, West Nile virus, avian influenza), the
    detonation of major explosive devices, and the use of
    nuclear weapons by countries unfriendly to the United
    States. We possess a heightened awareness of the forces
    of Mother Nature and the health impact on communities affected by natural disasters. We continue to face a
    growing national shortage of nurses and nurse educators, a health care system that is severely stressed financially, and emergency departments that are functioning
    in disaster mode on a daily basis. We have reason to believe that these challenges for the profession will only
    intensify in the coming years. Nurses are challenged to
    be prepared for all hazards—to plan for pandemic influenza, chemical, biological, radiological/nuclear, and
    explosive (CBRNE) events, mass casualty incidents involving major burns, and surge capacity to accommodate a sudden influx of hundreds, possibly thousands, of
    patients. In response to these concerns and the requests
    of nurses across the country, I have added several new
    chapters in the second edition that serve to strengthen
    the health systems focus of the book and to add a strong
    clinical presence.
    v
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    Preface
    Since 2003, the Department of Homeland Security,
    the Federal Emergency Management Administration
    (FEMA), the CDC, and other federal and nonfederal
    agencies have devoted significant resources to increasing our level of national emergency preparedness. We
    had made significant progress on certain fronts, but with
    regard to our level of workforce preparedness in the
    health professions, we have a long way to go. In the
    years since the first edition of this textbook was published, other nursing texts and educational resources
    have been developed and published, and this author applauds these initiatives. There is much work to be done,
    and it is personally rewarding to witness increased interest in disaster nursing as more nurses get involved.
    As an emergency nurse and pediatric nurse practitioner, I have worked in the field of disaster nursing and
    emergency preparedness for many years, with a focus on
    promoting the health of the community and the health
    of the consumer by structuring, developing, and fostering an environment that is prepared for any disaster or
    major public health emergency. I have lobbied for the
    advancement of the profession of nursing in the disaster policy and education arena, and I remain personally
    committed to my work in preparing a national nursing workforce that is adequately prepared to respond to
    any disaster or public health emergency. This includes
    working to establish sustainable community partnerships that foster collaboration and mutual planning for
    the health of our community. It includes looking at innovative applications of technology to enhance sustainable
    learning and disaster nursing response. It means giving
    reflective consideration of the realities of the clinical demands placed on nurses during catastrophic events and
    the need for consideration of altered standards for clinical care during disasters and public health emergencies.
    This textbook continues to be a reflection of my
    love for writing and research, as well as a deep desire to
    help nurses protect themselves, their families, and their
    communities. Disaster nursing is a patient safety issue.
    Nurses can only protect their patients if they themselves are safe first. The second edition represents a
    substantive attempt to collect, expand, update, and include the most valid and reliable information currently
    available about various disasters, public health emergencies, and acts of terrorism. The target audience for
    the book is every nurse in America—making every nurse
    a prepared nurse—staff nurses, nurse practitioners, educators, and administrators. The scope of the book is
    broad and the depth of detail intricate. My goal is to produce a second edition that represents a well-researched
    and well-organized scholarly work that will serve as a
    major reference for all our nation’s nurses on the topics of disaster nursing and emergency preparedness. It is
    my hope that nurse educators will be pleased to discover
    the expanded organization of the book and the inclusion
    of new chapters, case studies, and study questions. The
    insertion of Internet-based activities is designed to stimulate critical thinking in students and to provide them
    with the skill set to stay updated regarding these topics.
    Ideally, this book represents the foundation for best
    practice in disaster nursing and emergency preparedness,
    and is a stepping stone for the discipline of disaster nursing research. Chapters in this book were based on empirical evidence whenever it was available. However,
    the amount of research in existence addressing disaster
    nursing and health outcomes is limited, and much work
    remains to be done. The editor welcomes constructive
    comments regarding the content of this text.
    Tener Goodwin Veenema
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    Acknowledgments
    As with the first edition of this book, I continue to profess that researching, revising, designing, and delivering this book was a true labor of love—I enjoyed every
    minute of it! And like any effective disaster response,
    this textbook was a coordinated team effort. The second
    edition is significantly larger than the first—several new
    chapters have been added, all of the content updated,
    and the clinical focus expanded. Additionally, the entire book has been mapped to the Centers for Disease
    Control and Prevention’s competencies for public health
    emergency preparedness—this represents nothing less
    than a Herculean effort. There are so many exceptional
    individuals, all over the country, who helped to make
    this book a reality.
    My special thanks must first go to each of the wonderful chapter authors who researched, reviewed, and
    revised their manuscripts, assuring that the information
    contained within was valid, accurate, and reliable, and
    reflected the most current state of the science. This was
    a tremendous challenge given the highly transitional nature of many of the topic areas. The science was rapidly
    evolving (and continues to evolve) and as with the first
    edition, the structure of many disaster and emergency
    response systems was rapidly changing (and continues
    to change) during the year it was written.
    I would like to first thank my fabulous colleagues
    who were chapter authors and/or contributors for the
    first edition and stayed committed to this project for the
    second edition. My very sincere thanks go to Kathleen
    Coyne Plum, PhD, RN, NPP (Monroe County Department of Human Services); Kristine Qureshi, RN, CEN,
    DNSc (University of Hawaii); Brigitte L. Nacos, PhD and
    Kristine M. Gebbie, DrPH, RN, FAAN (Columbia University); Lisa Marie Bernardo, RN, PhD, MPH (University
    of Pittsburgh); Erica Rihl Pryor, RN, PhD and Dave Pigott, MD, FACEP (University of Alabama); Linda Landesman, DrPH, MSW, ACSW, LCSW, BCD (NYC Health &
    Hospitals Consortium); Kathryn McCabe Votava, PhD,
    RN and Cathy Peters, MS, RN, APRN-BC (University of
    Rochester); P. Andrew Karam, PhD, CHP (MJW Corporation); Joan Stanley, PhD, RN, CRNP (American
    Association of Colleges of Nursing); Lt. Col. Richard
    Ricciardi, RN, FNP and Patricia Hinton Walker, PhD,
    RN, FAAN (Uniformed Services University of the Health
    Services); Janice B. Griffin Agazio, PhD, CRNP, RN
    (The Catholic University of America); Eric Croddy, MA
    (Monterey Institute for International Studies); and Gary
    Ackerman, MA (Center for Terrorism and Intelligence
    Studies). Thank you so much for your wonderful contributions and for your ongoing support of this book.
    Very special acknowledgments and many thanks
    go to my international colleagues at the University of
    Ulster—Pat Deeny, Kevin Davies, and Mark Gillespie,
    and welcome to Wendy Spencer. These wonderful individuals were committed to providing a broad and illustrative international perspective for the book. Their
    resultant chapter, Global Issues in Disaster Relief Nursing, is evidence of their expert knowledge, extensive
    experience in the field, and dedication to international
    collegiality. I will always remain grateful to each of them
    for their contributions to the field.
    My thanks go once again to Jonathan Tucker, my
    special contributor, for allowing me to reprint a portion
    of his work from his wonderful book Scourge: The Once
    and Future Threat of Smallpox. It continues to be the
    perfect segue into the Chemical and Biological Terrorism
    section of the book.
    I wish to thank each of the case study authors and
    welcome the following new authors to the second edition of the book. Thanks go to Ziad N. Kazzi, MD,
    FAAEM, along with his colleagues Dave Pigott, MD,
    FACEP and Erica Pryor, RN, PhD at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Center for Disaster Preparedness.
    The quality of their work is incredible, as is their generosity in sharing it.
    Another very special welcome and thanks go to
    Roberta Lavin (Health and Human Services) and Lynn
    Slepski (Department of Homeland Security). Roberta
    and Lynn made sure that the descriptions of the National Response Plan and all components of the federal
    disaster program were as accurate as possible up to the
    time of publication. They are also two of the nicest and
    most generous individuals one would ever want to meet.
    Welcome and thanks go to Christopher Lentz, MD,
    FACS, FCCM; Dixie Reid, PA; Brooke Rea, MS, RN; and
    Kerry Kehoe, MS (University of Rochester) for their
    chapter addressing the recognition and management of
    burns and guidelines for disaster planning for a surge of
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    Acknowledgments
    burn patients. Dr. Lentz, as the Director of the regional
    Burn/Trauma Center at the University of Rochester Medical Center, along with his wife Dixie Reid, are burn
    experts and tireless advocates for clinical excellence in
    the care of the severely burned patient. Both Brooke Rea
    (Burn Program Manager) and Kerry Kehoe (former Administrator Division of Trauma & Burn) are graduates of
    the Leadership in Health Care Systems in Disaster Response and Emergency Health Care Systems, and so it
    is an even greater pleasure to be able to include them in
    this edition of the book. Brooke’s talents and leadership
    skills were clearly evident in her effort to produce this
    chapter, and I send her my special thanks.
    A sincere welcome and thanks go out to two new
    authors and former students of mine, Tara Sacco, MS,
    BS, RN and Jennifer Byrnes, MLS, MPH (University
    of Rochester). Tara is a graduate of the Leadership in
    Health Care Systems program in Health Promotion and
    Health Education; Jennifer is a graduate of the Master’s in Public Health program. Both are talented researchers and writers, and it is my guess that you will
    be hearing more from them in the future. Their chapters
    on Traumatic Injuries Due to Explosions and Blast Effects, and Emerging Infectious Diseases (respectively)
    broadly expanded the clinical focus of the book and
    provided valuable new clinical resource information for
    nurses.
    Welcome and thanks go to Amy T. Campbell, JD,
    MBE (University of Rochester, Division of Medical Humanities) for her detailed legal review and update of the
    chapter on Legal and Ethical Issues in Disaster Response
    and to Joy Spellman (Burlington County College, New
    Jersey) for her contributions on preparing and promoting the role of the public health nurses during disasters.
    Both of these authors were so gracious and generous
    with their expertise. Thank you.
    A very special warm welcome and thanks go to
    Elizabeth A. Davis, JD, Ed.M and her colleagues Alan
    Clive, PhD, Jane A. Kushma, PhD, and Jennifer Mincin,
    MPA. Elizabeth is the Founder and President of Elizabeth Ann Davis Associates (http://www.eadassociates.
    com/) and is a nationally recognized expert/advocate
    for vulnerable populations. It was extremely important
    to me to add a substantive piece on planning for and
    responding to the needs of high-risk, high-vulnerability
    populations in this edition of the book, and Alan, Elizabeth, Jane, and Jennifer provided a superb chapter on
    this topic (and in a relatively short time frame). My sincere thanks and admiration go out to each of you for
    your work.
    Welcome and gratitude go to Manish Shah, MD,
    MPH, FACEP; Jeremy Cushman, MD, MS; Charles Maddow, MD, FACEP; and Jonnathan Busko, MD, MPH,
    EMT-P (University of Rochester, Department of Emergency Medicine), and to my colleague John Benitez,
    MD, MPH at the Center for Disaster Medicine and
    Emergency Preparedness (University of Rochester, Department of Emergency Medicine). Manish Shah, along
    with his colleagues Jeremy, Charles, and Jonnathan,
    contributed a comprehensive overview of Emergency
    Medical Services as it currently exists in this country.
    This well-designed and well-organized chapter was a
    wonderful new addition to the book. John Benitez is
    Director of the Western New York Regional Poison Control Center, who along with Sharon Benware, RN, contributed to the chapter addressing chemical agents of
    concern.
    I want to express my continued appreciation and
    sincere gratitude to Lisa Bernardo, Erica Pryor, Kristine Qureshi, and Kathy Plum for their elegant contributions, for their ongoing support and encouragement,
    and for their willingness to make recommendations that
    strengthened the content of the book. I have the ultimate
    respect for each of you, and I am sincerely grateful for
    our ongoing relationships!
    Special thanks go out to my wonderful friends and
    colleagues, Diane Yeater, Associate Director for Disaster
    Health Services and to Nancy McKelvey, Chief Nurse
    at the American Red Cross, National Headquarters in
    Washington, DC. Thank you for your contributions and
    your insight into national disaster preparedness and response initiatives.
    I am so fortunate to call the University of Rochester
    School of Nursing my academic home. This phenomenal school is a leader in excellence in nursing education and in entrepreneurship for nurses, and I have
    learned something from every one of my talented colleagues. I wish to once again thank Dean Patricia Chiverton for creating an environment that supports new and
    visionary initiatives and for supporting and encouraging me to do the work that I want to do. I am eternally
    grateful to Pat and to each of my fellow faculty members in the Leadership in Health Care Systems Master’s
    Program.
    As I finish the second edition of this book, I would
    also like to acknowledge 19 wonderfully talented individuals and very special, terrific friends—my colleagues in the 2004 Robert Wood Johnson Executive Nurse Fellowship: Carla Baumann, Suzanne Boyle,
    Kathleen Capitulo, June Chan, Theresa Daggi, Kathryn
    Fiandt, Margaret Frankhauser, Mary Hooshmand, Paul
    Kuehnert, Mary Joan Ladden, Joan Marren, Marcia
    Maurer, Marcella McKay, Wanda Montalvo, Kathleen
    Murphy, Cheri Rinehart, Mary Lou de Leon Siantz,
    Kristen Swanson, and Bonnie Westra. We have shared
    an amazing experience in this wonderful program, and
    they have provided me with insight and guidance for
    my work, of which this book represents a portion of the
    overall project—ReadyRN: Making Every Nurse a Prepared Nurse. Their incredible work inspired me. But
    mostly I am grateful for the fun, friendship, and support they offered. They believed in my vision for disaster
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    Acknowledgments
    nursing and for this book, and they are always there for
    me when I need them. Thank you.
    Special thanks to Loretta Ford, former Dean and Professor Emeritus at the University of Rochester School of
    Nursing, and founder of the nurse practitioner role. I
    have had the amazing good fortune of having Lee as my
    mentor in the Robert Wood Johnson Executive Nurse
    Fellowship Program. There are no words to describe
    this feisty, energetic, phenomenally talented nurse and
    scholar. She is a role model to the entire profession of
    nursing, and my life is richer for having known her.
    Her wisdom and guidance have played a pivotal role in
    much of my work the past few years. Her kindness and
    support have sustained me. Thank you so much Lee.
    I wish to thank all of my reviewers and those who
    provided valued commentary and recommendations.
    Special thanks to Lori Barrette (University of Rochester),
    Janice Springer (American Red Cross), and Lou Romig,
    MD, FAAP, FACEP. Just as there is no perfect research
    study, there is also not a perfect textbook or reference
    manual. This fact, however, did not dissuade us from
    seeking to make this book and every section in it the
    very best it could be. Many thanks to all who shared
    their wisdom and expertise during the preparation of
    the book.
    I would like to acknowledge Sally Barhydt and her
    colleagues at Springer Publishing Company in New York
    City. I sincerely thank you, Sally, for all your hard work
    in assisting with the publication of the second edition,
    and for your ongoing commitment to me as an author.
    ix
    I will be eternally grateful to my colleague and research assistant Adam B. Rains for his assistance with
    the preparation of this very large manuscript. Adam’s intelligence, humor and wit—and limitless talent—were a
    gift to this project.
    Many thanks go to three very special women who
    are the best friends anyone could ask for—Katherine
    Lostumbo, Barbara Wale, and Maryanne Townsend. The
    warmth of your friendship continues to sustain me.
    Finally, the people to whom I owe the most are my
    family. To my mother, thank you for all you have done
    for me and for thinking that I am much more capable
    than I really am. You often told me, “to thine own self
    be true,” when making my life’s decisions—great advice
    that I have often passed down to my children. Thanks
    to my dad—I love you lots.
    To my four children, I sincerely thank you for the
    joy you have brought to my life. You are my greatest
    accomplishment. My sons Kyle, Blair, and Ryne—I love
    you so much. A huge and especially special thank you
    goes to my wonderful daughter Kendall, who has been
    a terrific help to me for many, many years. Her words
    of encouragement (and the sound of her laughter) have
    always kept me going! She is my very best friend and
    the most incredible person I know.
    And to my husband and partner in all life’s adventures, my deepest thanks. I could not have done any of
    this without you. You have helped me in too many ways
    to mention, and I am so appreciative of each and every
    moment we have shared. Thank you.
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    x
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    Contributors
    Gary Ackerman, MA
    Sharon Benware, RN, CSPI
    Director
    Center for Terrorism and Intelligence Studies
    A Division of the Akribis Group
    San Jose, California
    RA Lawrence Poison and Drug Information Center
    Rochester, New York
    Janice B. Griffin Agazio, PhD, CRNP, RN
    Assistant Professor
    The Catholic University of America
    School of Nursing
    Washington, DC
    Sherri-Lynne Almeida, DrPH, MSN, Med, RN, CEN
    Chief Operating Officer—Team Health Southwest
    Houston, Texas
    Knox Andress, RN, FAEN
    Designated Regional Coordinator
    Louisiana Region 7 Hospital Preparedness
    Director of Emergency Preparedness
    Louisiana Poison Center
    Shreveport, Louisiana
    Randal D. Beaton, PhD, EMT
    Research Professor
    Department of Psychosocial and Community
    Health
    School of Nursing
    Adjunct Research Professor
    Department of Health Services
    School of Public Health and Community Medicine
    University of Washington
    Seattle, Washington
    Lisa Marie Bernardo, RN, PhD, MPH
    Associate Professor
    University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing
    Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
    Jonnathan Busko, MD, MPH, EMT-P
    Emergency Physician / Medical Director,
    Operations
    Eastern Maine Medical Center
    Bangor, Maine
    Regional Medical Director, Maine EMS
    Region 4
    Medical Director, Maine Medical Strike Team
    New England MMRS
    Medical Director, Northeastern Maine Regional
    Resource Center and
    Center for Emergency Preparedness
    Eastern Maine Healthcare System
    Jennifer A. Byrnes, MLS, MPH
    University of Rochester School of Medicine
    and Dentistry
    Rochester, New York
    Amy T. Campbell, JD, MBE
    Division of Medical Humanities
    University of Rochester Medical Center
    Rochester, New York
    John G. Benitez, MD, MPH
    Alan Clive, PhD
    Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine,
    Environmental Medicine and Pediatrics
    University of Rochester School of Medicine and
    Dentistry
    Director, Finger Lakes Regional Resource Center
    Managing and Associate Medical Director
    RA Lawrence Poison and Drug Information Center
    Rochester, New York
    Emergency Management Consultant
    Silver Spring, Maryland
    Eric Croddy, MA
    Senior Research Associate
    Monterey Institute of International Studies
    Center for Nonproliferation Studies
    Monterey, California
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    Contributors
    Jeremy T. Cushman, MD, MS
    P. Andrew Karam, PhD, CHP
    Division of EMS and Office of Prehospital
    Care
    Department of Emergency Medicine
    University of Rochester School of Medicine and
    Dentistry
    Rochester, New York
    Senior Health Physicist
    MJW Corporation
    Rochester, New York
    Kevin Davies, RRC, RN, MA, RNT, PGCE
    Senior Lecturer in Nursing
    School of Care Sciences
    University of Glamorgan
    Pontypridd, South Wales, United Kingdom
    Elizabeth A. Davis, JD, Ed.M
    Director
    EAD & Associates, LLC
    Emergency Management & Special Needs Consultants
    New York, New York
    Pat Deeny, RN, RNT, BSc (Hons) Nursing
    Ad Dip Ed.
    Senior Lecturer in Nursing
    University of Ulster, Magee Campus
    Derry-Londonderry, Northern Ireland
    Mary Kate Dilts Skaggs, RN, MSN
    Director of Nursing Emergency Services
    Southern Ohio Medical Center
    Portsmouth, Ohio
    Kristine M. Gebbie, DrPH, RN, FAAN
    Elizabeth Standish Gill Associate Professor
    Columbia University School of Nursing
    Center for Health Policy
    New York, New York
    Mark Gillespie, RN, MSc
    Advanced Nursing, Critical Nurse Specialist
    Lecturer Trauma Nursing
    University of Ulster, Magee
    Derry-Londonberry, Northern Ireland
    Ziad N. Kazzi, MD, FAAEM
    Assistant Professor
    Medical Toxicologist
    Department of Emergency Medicine
    University of Alabama
    Birmingham, Alabama
    Kerry Kehoe, MS
    Administrator, Division of Trauma, Burn &
    Emergency Surgery
    University of Rochester Medical Center
    Rochester, New York
    Paul Kuehnert, MS, RN
    Deputy Director
    Kane County Department of Health
    Aurora, Illinois
    Jane A. Kushma, PhD
    Associate Professor
    Institute for Emergency Preparedness
    Jacksonville State University
    Jacksonville, Alabama
    Linda Young Landesman, DrPH, MSW, ACSW,
    LCSW, BCD
    NYC Health and Hospitals Corporation
    New York, New York
    Roberta Proffitt Lavin, MSN, APRN, BC
    CAPT, United States Public Health Service
    Director, Office of Human Services Emergency
    Preparedness and Response
    Administration for Children and Families
    Department of Health and Human Services
    Washington, DC
    Christopher W. Lentz, MD, FACS, FCCM
    Kevin D. Hart, JD, PhD
    Assistant Professor
    Department of Community and Preventative
    Medicine
    University of Rochester School of Medicine
    and Dentistry
    Rochester, New York
    Medical Director, Strong Regional Burn Center
    Associate Professor of Surgery and
    Pediatrics
    University of Rochester School of Medicine and
    Dentistry
    Rochester, New York
    Charles L. Maddow, MD, FACEP
    Angela J. Hodge, RN, BSN, CEN
    Clinical Coordinator for Emergency Services
    Southern Ohio Medical Center
    Portsmouth, Ohio
    Department of Emergency Medicine
    University of Rochester School of Medicine and
    Dentistry
    Rochester, New York
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    Contributors
    Nancy McKelvey, MSN, RN
    Kristine Qureshi, RN, CEN, DNSc
    Chief Nurse/Healthcare Partnerships Lead
    American Red Cross
    Washington, DC
    Associate Professor
    School of Nursing and Dental Hygiene
    University of Hawaii at Manoa
    Honolulu, Hawaii
    Jennifer Mincin, MPA
    Senior Project Manager
    EAD & Associates, LLC
    Emergency Management & Special Needs Consultants
    New York, New York
    Brigitte L. Nacos, PhD
    Department of Political Science
    Columbia University
    New York, New York
    Karen Nason
    Executive Director
    Association of Rehabilitation Nurses
    Rehabilitation Nursing Certification Board
    Sally A. Norton, PhD, RN
    Assistant Professor of Nursing
    University of Rochester School of Nursing
    Rochester, New York
    Cathy Peters, MS, RN, APRN-BC
    Assistant Clinical Professor
    University of Rochester School of Nursing
    Assistant Clinical Professor, Adjunct Faculty
    Division of Medical Humanities
    University of Rochester School of
    Medicine
    Rochester, New York
    David C. Pigott, MD, FACEP
    Residency Program Director
    Associate Professor and Vice Chair for Education
    Department of Emergency Medicine
    University of Alabama at Birmingham
    Birmingham, Alabama
    xiii
    Irwin Redlener, MD
    Associate Dean & Director
    The National Center for Disaster Preparedness
    Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health
    New York, New York
    Dixie Reid, PA
    Physician Assistant
    Trauma/Burn/Emergency Surgery
    University of Rochester School of Medicine and
    Dentistry
    Rochester, New York
    Brooke Rera, MS, RN
    Burn Program Manager
    University of Rochester/Strong Memorial Hospital
    Rochester, New York
    Lt. Col. Richard Ricciardi, RN, FNP
    Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
    Graduate School of Nursing
    Bethesda, Maryland
    Lou E. Romig, MD, FAAP, FACEP
    Pediatric Emergency Medicine
    Miami Children’s Hospital
    Pediatric Medical Advisor, Miami-Dade Fire Rescue
    Department
    South Florida Regional Disaster Medical Assistance
    Team (FL-5 DMAT)
    Miami, Florida
    Tara Sacco, MS, BS, RN
    Burn Trauma Unit
    University of Rochester Medical Center
    Rochester, New York
    Kathleen Coyne Plum, PhD, RN, NPP
    Manish N. Shah, MD, MPH, FACEP
    Director, Office of Mental Health,
    Monroe County Department of Human Services
    Rochester, New York
    Adjunct Associate Professor, University of Rochester
    School of Nursing
    Rochester, New York
    Director, EMS Research
    Assistant Professor
    Department of Emergency Medicine
    Department of Community and Preventive Medicine
    University of Rochester School of Medicine and
    Dentistry
    Rochester, New York
    Erica Rihl Pryor, RN, MSN, PhD
    Doctoral Program Coordinator and Assistant Professor
    University of Alabama School of Nursing
    University of Alabama at Birmingham
    Birmingham, Alabama
    Capt. Lynn A. Slepski, RN, MSN, PhD-C, CCNS
    Senior Public Health Advisor
    Department of Homeland Security
    Washington, DC
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    Contributors
    Joy Spellman, MS, RN
    Jennifer Timony
    Director, Center for Public Health Preparedness
    Burlington County College
    Mt. Laurel, New Jersey
    President
    National Student Nurses’ Association, Inc.
    Wendy Spencer
    President
    GoodCare.com
    Washington, DC
    University of Ulster
    Janice Springer, RN, PHN, MA
    Disaster Health Services
    American Red Cross
    Washington, DC
    Joan M. Stanley, PhD, RN, CRNP
    Director of Education Policy
    American Association of Colleges of
    Nursing
    Washington, DC
    Kathryn McCabe Votava, PhD, RN
    Patricia Hinton Walker, PhD, RN, FAAN
    Vice President for Nursing Policy and Professor
    Uniformed Services University of the
    Health Sciences
    Bethesda, Maryland
    Dianne Yeater
    Director for Disaster Health Services
    American Red Cross
    Washington, DC
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    Dedication
    Our world is not safe. Fraught with peril, it continues
    to be a dangerous place in which to live. And yet we
    know that our children need safe homes, safe schools,
    and safe communities to live in if they are to grow to
    be healthy, happy, and secure adults. They are counting
    on us to be there for them—no matter what the circumstances. They are counting on us to provide love,
    protection, and a safe harbor in the storm. They are
    counting on us to be prepared. They are counting on us
    to rescue them when they need rescuing. This textbook
    is dedicated to our nation’s children—four in particular.
    To Kyle, Kendall, Blair, and Ryne—you are everything to
    me. Always know how much I love you and that home
    is a safe harbor. And know that I tried to make the world
    a safer place.
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    Foreword
    Most doctors, nurses, and other health workers look forward to a life pursuing their chosen career in relative
    order, peace, and tranquility. However, the unexpected,
    by its very nature, can strike anywhere, at any time, and
    involve anybody or everybody, including those who are
    unprepared. A disaster can happen in any community
    at any time. It is an inescapable fact brought into focus
    by the calamitous events we have seen befall our fellow
    citizens in just the past 5 years. From the four hurricanes that hit our coastal regions in just one 6-week
    period in 2004 to the twin shocks of the South Asia
    tsunami and Hurricane Katrina; earthquakes in Indonesia; floods; terrorist bombings in the London subway
    and Iraq (an everyday phenomenon in Baghdad); and
    a humanitarian crisis of unimaginable horror in Sudan,
    it is clear that no community is immune. Nurses have
    a primary role in preparing for and managing medical
    care during these episodic, but catastrophic, events. On
    a global scale, nurses are active participants in caring
    for victims of a wide variety of disasters that take place
    on an almost daily basis.
    The second edition of Disaster Nursing and Emergency Preparedness for Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Terrorism and Other Hazards has been designed
    to provide emergency caregivers with a concise reference for managing specific disaster-preparedness and
    response issues while providing the prerequisite background necessary to begin an in-depth study of the
    health consequences of the most common types of disasters. The experience of the editor and many of the
    chapter authors is unique. The organizations for which
    they work cover the range of disasters that strike this
    world. We owe an enormous debt of gratitude to them
    all for their unstinting efforts to update this classic work.
    Postdisaster evaluations conducted by nurses of the
    management of disasters by health professionals have
    provided critical data for mitigating the human impact
    of these events and enhancing future responses to disasters. This has been especially true regarding Hurricane
    Katrina. As a result, disaster management is well recognized as far more than just triage and mass casualty management. Since the first edition of this book
    was published, we have seen significant changes in
    the health management of disasters, whether natural
    or man-made. It is increasingly appreciated that the
    phenomenon goes far beyond the punctual provision
    of relief to the population affected and extends from
    advanced preparedness to the problems of long-term
    rehabilitation. While always emphasizing the use of
    proven management methods and practices, Dr. Veenema challenges nursing health professionals with questions that must still be answered in order for them to
    respond effectively in emergency situations. I know that
    decision makers at the highest echelons of government
    have increasingly relied on the nursing profession to
    address the myriad problems facing a disaster-affected
    community.
    In the relatively short period of time that has elapsed
    since September 11, 2001, it is remarkable that a considerable body of new knowledge and experience related
    to the adverse health effects of disasters has already accumulated. In fact, disaster research has accelerated to
    such an extent that we probably need to update the results of this research at a minimum of every year so that
    we can apply the lessons learned during one disaster to
    the management of the next. Conveying so much information in so few pages, with the right mix of scientific
    data and human concern, in a practical and clear format, is no mean task. As the most comprehensive textbook on disaster nursing ever published (except for the
    groundbreaking first edition published in 2003), Disaster Nursing and Emergency Preparedness for Chemical,
    Biological, and Radiological Terrorism and Other Hazards does exactly that and more. With years of experience, Dr. Veenema and co-authors give the reader ample
    technical descriptions of each kind of disaster (particularly chemical, biological, radiological terrorism, and
    other hazards), an examination of the kinds of issues
    and problems that arise in planning hospital and emergency department disaster response, and an up-to-date
    review of the more common medical and management
    issues that might face a nurse involved in a local disaster. Unique chapters include those addressing the legal
    and ethical issues in disaster response, the role of the
    media, effective communication with the public (a major deficiency during Hurricane Katrina and the South
    Asia tsunami), the special needs of children during disasters and public health emergencies, and the evolving
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    Foreword
    priorities of the Departments of Health and Human Services and Homeland Security.
    Like the first edition, the second edition includes
    well-designed case studies that provide realistic, handson experiences that challenge the reader to apply information provided in the chapters. Dr. Veenema’s inclusion of “Key Messages” and “Learning Objectives” that
    introduce each major section of the book, plus unique
    case studies addressing natural, industrial, and terrorism disasters, has resulted in the creation of a major resource that will serve as a timely, comprehensive, and
    structured text for the education of hospital, community,
    state, and national health and medical emergency managers, as well as nursing students who will assume major mass emergency preparedness responsibilities immediately after graduation.
    It is incumbent that all health care workers, and
    nurses in particular, react professionally, efficiently, rationally, and effectively when disaster strikes. To do so,
    they need some fundamental principles and knowledge
    on which to base their activities. This highly topical
    book will serve as the most up-to-date course textbook
    and desk reference available not only for nursing professionals responsible for preparing their hospitals for
    responding to disasters and other public health emergencies but also for emergency managers and other decision makers charged with ensuring that disasters are
    well managed.
    Eric K. Noji, MD, MPH, FACEP
    Program Director
    Pandemic Avian Influenza Preparedness
    Program
    Global Epidemic Intelligence Network
    Center for Disaster Medicine & Humanitarian
    Assistance
    Department of Military & Emergency Medicine
    Uniformed Services University of the
    Health Sciences
    Bethesda, Maryland
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    Foreword
    In the years since the first edition of this book was published, the complexity of terrorism has continued to increase. We now are very aware that terrorists exist, not
    only outside our country trying to get in, but also inside
    our country in small towns and large cities where some
    of our own citizens are plotting our downfall.
    I have always said that nurses are the glue that holds
    our health care delivery system (as fragmented as it is)
    together. Once a nurse, always a nurse! Nurses in our
    communities are also expected to be able to respond to
    the natural and man-made disasters that we will surely
    encounter in the next few years. Our response must be
    evidence based, as is so well exemplified by these chapters. This text gathers together the best thoughts about
    evidence-based response wherever possible and identifies where the evidence is spotty and slim.
    As the founder of the International Nursing Coalition for Mass Casualty Education in March 2001
    (now the Nursing Emergency Preparedness Education
    Coalition), which now represents over 80 nursing organizations, friends of nursing, and subject matter experts,
    I was not privy to any special vision. I knew that our
    public health infrastructure was rickety—at best—and
    that, in the event of any kind of mass casualty event,
    nurses would be expected to be in the forefront. I also
    knew that disaster nursing had virtually disappeared
    from our curricula, although we still incorporated basic
    population-based public health principles. If one good
    thing comes out of the tragedy of 9/11, it will be that
    monies granted from Congress to address terrorism will
    serve a dual role and also help strengthen our public
    health infrastructure.
    The book you are about to read offers a comprehensive analysis of a broad range of disasters possible in today’s world—both those wreaked by humans as well as
    by nature. This text is the next generation of information
    needed by nurses to be informed about and responsive
    to the needs of our citizens in a disaster. Katrina was a
    wake-up event. The roles that nurses and nurse assistants played in that disaster were selfless and inspiring.
    Katrina only served to undergird our awareness that we
    must be vigilant and prepared!
    Colleen Conway-Welch, PhD, RN, CNM, FAAN,
    FACNM
    Nancy & Hilliard Travis Professor of Nursing
    Dean
    Vanderbilt University School of Nursing
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    Special Foreword
    As a Robert Wood Johnson Executive Nurse Fellow, Dr.
    Veenema, a disaster nursing expert, chose to pursue
    a lofty fellowship goal of “creating a national nursing
    workforce adequately prepared to respond to a disaster
    or any major public health emergency.” This monumental undertaking sounds and is formidable. Still, this second edition of her highly successful earlier publication,
    Disaster Nursing, convinces me she is well on the way
    toward that goal.
    This expanded and updated edition is all encompassing and forms the basis for all her other efforts
    in developing printware and software and educational
    forums, coordinating and collaborating with volunteer
    and governmental agencies, and encouraging educational and professional organizations to help prepare
    nurses and other health professionals for natural and
    man-made disasters. The breadth and depth of this publication are phenomenally comprehensive and practical as well as theoretically and scientifically sound. Its
    xx
    expanded scope ranges from preparedness and management to specific types of disasters, ending with
    chapters on nursing education, research, and global
    connections.
    I would find this edition particularly useful for its
    teaching/learning framework that focuses the learner
    on goals and expected outcomes. Case studies expedite
    discourse and critical thinking as do references and Internet sources.
    In its expanded form and extensive content, this second edition is indeed required reading as a textbook, a
    reference, a compendium of comprehensive topics, and
    foundational to “making every nurse a prepared nurse.”
    Loretta C. Ford, RN, PNP, EdD
    Dean Emeritus
    University of Rochester School of Nursing
    Founder of the Nurse Practioner Program
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    Contents
    About the Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
    Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v
    Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vii
    Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi
    Dedication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xv
    Foreword (Eric K. Noji ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xvii
    Foreword (Colleen Conway-Welch ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xix
    Special Foreword (Loretta C. Ford ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xx
    P A R T
    I
    DISASTER PREPAREDNESS
    Chapter 1
    Essentials of Disaster Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
    Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Chapter 2
    Leadership and Coordination in Disaster Health Care Systems:
    The Federal Disaster Response Network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
    Roberta Lavin, Lynn Slepski, and Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Chapter 3
    Emergency Health Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
    Jeremy T. Cushman, Manish N. Shah, Charles L. Maddow, and Jonnathan Busko
    Chapter 4
    American Red Cross Disaster Health Services and Disaster Nursing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
    Dianne Yeater and Nancy McKelvey
    Chapter 5
    Understanding the Psychosocial Impact of Disasters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
    Kathleen Coyne Plum
    Chapter 6
    Legal and Ethical Issues in Disaster Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
    Amy T. Campbell, Kevin D. Hart, and Sally A. Norton
    Chapter 7
    Crisis Communication: The Role of the Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
    Brigitte L. Nacos
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    Contents
    P A R T
    I I
    DISASTER MANAGEMENT
    Chapter 8
    Disaster Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
    Kristine Qureshi and Kristine M. Gebbie
    Chapter 9
    Disaster Triage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
    Kristine Qureshi and Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Chapter 10
    Restoring Public Health Under Disaster Conditions: Basic Sanitation, Water
    and Food Supply, and Shelter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179
    Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Chapter 11
    Managing Emergencies Outside of the Hospital: Special Events, Mass Gatherings,
    and Mass Casualty Incidents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205
    Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Chapter 12
    Management of Burn Mass Casualty Incidents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221
    Christopher Lentz, Dixie Reid, Brooke Rera, and Kerry Kehoe
    Chapter 13
    Traumatic Injury Due to Explosives and Blast Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
    Tara Sacco
    Chapter 14
    Management of Psychosocial Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 255
    Kathleen Coyne Plum and Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Chapter 15
    Unique Needs of Children During Disasters and Other Public Health Emergencies . . . . 273
    Lisa Marie Bernardo
    Chapter 16
    Identifying and Accommodating High-Risk and High-Vulnerability Populations . . . . . . . 309
    Alan Clive, Elizabeth A. Davis, Jane A. Kushma, and Jennifer Mincin
    P A R T
    I I I
    NATURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL DISASTERS
    Chapter 17
    Natural Disasters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
    Linda Young Landesman and Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Chapter 18
    Environmental Disasters and Emergencies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 351
    Tener Goodwin Veenema
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    P A R T
    xxiii
    I V
    DISASTERS CAUSED BY CHEMICAL, BIOLOGICAL, AND RADIOLOGICAL AGENTS
    Chapter 19
    Biological and Chemical Terrorism: A Unique Threat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 365
    Eric Croddy and Gary Ackerman
    Chapter 20
    Surveillance Systems for Detection of Biological Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389
    Erica Rihl Pryor
    Chapter 21
    Biological Agents of Concern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 403
    David C. Pigott and Ziad N. Kazzi
    Chapter 22
    Early Recognition and Detection of Biological Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 423
    Erica Rihl Pryor
    Chapter 23
    Emerging Infectious Disease . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 437
    Jennifer A. Byrnes
    Chapter 24
    Design and Implementation of Mass Immunization and Prophylactic
    Treatment Clinics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 459
    Kathryn McCabe Votava
    Chapter 25
    Chemical Agents of Concern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 483
    Tener Goodwin Veenema, John Benitez, and Sharon Benware
    Chapter 26
    Mass Casualty Decontamination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 505
    Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Chapter 27
    Radiological Incidents and Emergencies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 521
    Andrew Karam
    P A R T
    V
    SPECIAL TOPICS
    Chapter 28
    Directions for Nursing Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 545
    Joan M. Stanley and Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Chapter 29
    Directions for Nursing Research and Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 559
    Richard Ricciardi, Janice B. Griffin Agazio, Roberta P. Lavin, and
    Patricia Hinton Walker
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    Contents
    Chapter 30
    Global Issues in Disaster Relief Nursing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 571
    Pat Deeny, Kevin Davies, Mark Gillespie, and Wendy Spencer
    Chapter 31
    The Role and Preparation of the Public Health Nurse for Disaster Response . . . . . . . . . 589
    Joy Spellman
    Epilogue
    Disaster Recovery: Creating Sustainable Disaster-Resistant Communities . . . . . . . . . . 601
    Tener Goodwin Veenema
    Appendices
    I
    Internet Resources on Disaster Preparedness, Emergency Care, and
    Bioterrorism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 603
    II
    Glossary of Terms Commonly Used in Disaster Preparedness and
    Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 607
    III
    Bioterrorism and Emergency Readiness: Competencies for All Public
    Health Workers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 615
    IV
    Federal Emergency Management Agency: Emergency Response Action
    Steps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 617
    V
    Anthrax Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 620
    VI
    Botulism Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 621
    VII
    Plague Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
    VIII
    Smallpox Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 623
    IX
    Tularemia Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 624
    X
    Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 625
    XI
    Biological Weapon (BW) Agent Lab Identification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 626
    XII
    Patient Isolation Precautions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 630
    XIII
    Creating a Personal Disaster Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 632
    INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 637
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    P A R T
    Disaster
    Preparedness
    1
    I
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    Key Messages
    ■ The frequency of natural disasters, the individuals affected by them, and the eco-
    nomic costs associated with loss have been steadily increasing over recent years.
    ■ While disasters are often unexpected, sound disaster planning can anticipate
    common problems and mitigate the consequences of the event.
    ■ Different types of disasters are associated with distinct patterns of illness and
    injury, and early assessment of risks and vulnerability can reduce morbidity and
    mortality later on.
    ■ Effective disaster plans are based on knowledge of how people behave. Key components and common tasks must be included in any disaster preparedness plan.
    ■ The actual process of planning is more important than the resultant written plan
    because those who participate in planning are more likely to accept preparedness
    plans in general.
    ■ Disaster planning must overcome apathy and complacency.
    ■ Disasters are different from daily emergencies; most cannot be managed simply
    by mobilizing additional personnel and supplies. Certain commonly occurring
    problems can be anticipated and addressed during planning.
    ■ A professional mandate exists that calls for nurses to participate in the development of and serve as an integral part of a community’s disaster preparedness
    plan.
    ■ Nurses must participate as full partners with both the medical community and
    emergency management community in all aspects of disaster response and
    recovery.
    Learning Objectives
    When this chapter is completed, readers will be able to
    1. Classify the major types of disasters based on their unique characteristics and
    describe their consequences.
    2. Identify societal factors that have contributed to increased losses (human and
    property) as the result of disasters.
    3. Describe two principles of disaster planning, including the agent-specific and the
    all-hazards approach, and the basic components of a disaster plan.
    4. Discuss the five areas of focus in emergency and disaster planning: preparedness, mitigation, response, recovery, and evaluation.
    5. Describe risk assessment, hazard identification, and vulnerability analysis.
    6. Assess constraints on a community’s or organization’s ability to respond.
    7. Describe the core preparedness actions.
    8. Recognize situations suggestive of an increased need for additional comprehensive planning.
    2
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    1
    Essentials of Disaster
    Planning
    Tener Goodwin Veenema
    C H A P T E R
    The principles of disaster planning, the common tasks
    consistent across all disaster responses, and the key
    components of a disaster preparedness plan are
    introduced in this chapter. Definitions of the different types
    of disasters are provided, along with a classification
    system for disasters based on their common and unique
    features; onset, duration, and effect (immediate
    aftermath); and reactive period. The concept of the
    disaster time line as an organizational framework for
    strategic planning is introduced. The five areas of focus in
    O V E R V I E W
    emergency and disaster preparedness—preparedness,
    mitigation, response, recovery, and evaluation—are
    addressed. Risk assessment, hazard identification and
    mapping, and vulnerability analysis are presented as
    methods for decision making and planning. The concepts
    of disaster epidemiology and measurement of the
    magnitude of a disaster’s impact on population health are
    explored. Situations suggestive of an increased need for
    planning, such as bioterrorism and hazmat (hazardous
    material) events, are addressed.
    nomic losses associated with these events have placed
    an imperative on disaster planning for emergency preparedness. Global warming, shifts in climates, sea-level
    rise, and societal factors may coalesce to create future
    calamities. Finally, war, acts of aggression, and the incidence of terrorist attacks are reminder of the potentially
    deadly consequences of man’s inhumanity toward man.
    A review of recent disasters since 2000—political
    strife and conflicts in Angola, Afghanistan, Ethiopia,
    D.R. Congo, Sudan, Iraq, and Sierra Leone—indicates
    that few disasters are the result of a single cause and
    INTRODUCTION
    Disasters have been integral parts of the human experience since the beginning of time, causing premature
    death, impaired quality of life, and altered health status. The risk of a disaster is ubiquitous. On average, one
    disaster per week that requires international assistance
    occurs somewhere in the world. The recent dramatic increase in natural disasters, their intensity, the number
    of people affected by them, and the human and eco-
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    Part I Disaster Preparedness
    effect. The disasters unfolding in this century are frequently complex human emergencies associated with
    global instability, economic decay, political upheaval
    and collapse of government structures, violence and
    civil conflicts, famine, and mass population displacements. The Sumatra tsunami and Hurricane Katrina,
    as well as the 2004 and 2006 hurricane seasons, point
    to more natural disasters and their growing complexity, which create considerable challenges to disaster
    planners.
    In the United States, nurses constitute the largest
    sector of the health care workforce and will certainly be
    on the front lines of any emergency response. As part of
    the country’s overall plan for disaster preparedness, all
    nurses must have a basic understanding of disaster science and the key components of disaster preparedness,
    including the following:
    (1) The definition and classification system for disasters
    and major incidents based on common and unique
    features of disasters (onset, duration, effect, and reactive period).
    (2) Disaster epidemiology and measurement of the
    health consequences of a disaster.
    (3) The five areas of focus in emergency and disaster
    preparedness: preparedness, mitigation, response,
    recovery, and evaluation.
    (4) Methods such as risk assessment, hazard identification and mapping, and vulnerability analysis.
    (5) Awareness of the role of the nurse in a much larger
    response system.
    This chapter introduces the reader to the principles of disaster planning, the common tasks consistent
    across all disaster responses, and the key components
    of a disaster preparedness plan.
    DEFINITION AND CLASSIFICATION
    OF DISASTERS
    Disasters have many definitions. Disaster may be defined as any destructive event that disrupts the normal functioning of a community. Disasters have been
    defined as ecologic disruptions, or emergencies, of a
    severity and magnitude that result in deaths, injuries,
    illness, and property damage that cannot be effectively
    managed using routine procedures or resources and that
    require outside assistance (Landesman et al., 2001).
    Health care providers characterize disasters by what
    they do to people—the consequences on health and
    health services. A medical disaster is a catastrophic
    event that results in causalities that overwhelm the
    health care resources in that community (Al-Madhari
    & Zeller, 1997). Noji (1997) describes disasters quite
    simply, as “events that require extraordinary efforts beyond those needed to respond to everyday emergencies”
    (p. 1). Disasters may be classified into two broad categories: natural (those caused by natural or environmental forces) or man-made (human generated). The World
    Health Organization defines natural disaster as the “result of an ecological disruption or threat that exceeds
    the adjustment capacity of the affected community”
    (Lechat, 1979). Natural disasters include earthquakes,
    floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, volcanic eruptions, ice
    storms, tsunamis, and other geologic or meteorological phenomena. Man-made disasters are those in which
    the principal direct causes are identifiable human actions, deliberate or otherwise (Noji, 1996). Man-made
    disasters include biological and biochemical terrorism,
    chemical spills, radiological (nuclear) events, fire, explosions, transportation accidents, armed conflicts, and
    acts of war.
    Human-generated disasters can be further divided
    into three broad categories: (a) complex emergencies,
    (b) technologic disasters, and (c) disasters that are not
    caused by natural hazards but occur in human settlements. Complex emergencies involve situations where
    populations suffer significant casualties as a result of
    war, civil strife, or other political conflict. Some disasters
    are the result of a combination of forces such as drought,
    famine, disease, and political unrest that displace millions of people from their homes. These humanitarian
    disasters can be epic in proportion, such as civilians fleeing the Iraq war or refugees displaced by the conflict in
    Darfur. With technologic disasters, large numbers of people, property, community infrastructure, and economic
    welfare are directly and adversely affected by major industrial accidents; unplanned release of nuclear energy;
    and fires or explosions from hazardous substances such
    as fuel, chemicals, or nuclear materials (Noji, 1996).
    The distinction between natural and human-generated
    disasters may be blurred; a natural disaster, or phenomenon, may trigger a secondary disaster, the result
    of weaknesses in the human environment. An example
    of this is a chemical plant explosion following an earthquake. Such combinations, or synergistic disasters, are
    commonly referred to as NA-TECHs (Natural and Technological Disasters) (Noji, 1996). A NA-TECH disaster
    occurred in the former Soviet Union, when windstorms
    spread radioactive materials across the country, increasing by almost 50% the land area contaminated in an earlier nuclear disaster. Disasters can and do occur simultaneously (e.g., a chemical attack along with a nuclear
    assault), potentiating the death and devastation created
    by each.
    Disasters are frequently categorized based on their
    onset, impact, and duration. For example, earthquakes
    and tornadoes are rapid-onset events—short durations
    but with a sudden impact on communities. Hurricanes
    and volcanic eruptions have a sudden impact on a
    community; however, frequently advance warnings are
    issued enabling planners to implement evacuation and
    early response plans. A bioterrorism attack may be
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    Chapter 1 Essentials of Disaster Planning
    sudden and unanticipated and have a sudden and prolonged impact on a community.
    In contrast, droughts and famines have a more gradual onset or chronic genesis (the so-called creeping disasters) and generally have a prolonged impact. Factors
    that influence the impact of a disaster on a community include the nature of the event, time of day or year,
    health and age characteristics of the population affected,
    and the availability of resources (Gans, 2001). Further
    classification of terms in the field of disaster science
    distinguishes between hazards and disasters. Hazards
    present the possibility of the occurrence of a disaster
    caused by natural phenomena (e.g., hurricane, earthquake), failure of man-made sources of energy (e.g.,
    nuclear power plant), or by human activity (e.g., war).
    Defining an event as a disaster also depends on the
    location in which it occurs, particularly the population
    density of that location. For example, an earthquake occurring in a sparsely populated area would not be considered a disaster if no people were injured or affected
    by loss of housing or essential services. However, the
    occurrence of even a small earthquake could produce
    extensive loss of life and property in a densely populated region (such as Los Angeles) or a region with
    inadequate construction or limited medical resources.
    Similarly, numbers and types of casualties that might
    be handled routinely by a large university hospital or
    metropolitan medical center could overwhelm a small
    community hospital.
    Hospitals and other health care facilities may further classify disasters as either “internal” or “external.”
    External disasters are those that do not affect the hospital infrastructure but do tax hospital resources due to
    numbers of patients or types of injuries (Gans, 2001).
    For example, a tornado that produced numerous injuries and deaths in a community would be considered
    an external disaster. Internal disasters cause disruption
    of normal hospital function due to injuries or deaths
    of hospital personnel or damage to the physical plant,
    as with a hospital fire, power failure, or chemical spill
    (Aghababian, Lewis, Gans, & Curley, 1994). Unfortunately, one type of hospital disaster does not necessarily
    preclude the other, and features of both internal and external disasters may be present if a natural phenomenon
    affects both the community and the hospital. This was
    the case with Hurricane Andrew (1992), which caused
    significant destruction in hospitals, in clinics, and in the
    surrounding community when it struck south Florida
    (Sabatino, 1992), and Hurricane Katrina (2005) when
    it impacted the Gulf Coast, rupturing the levee in New
    Orleans (Berggren, 2005).
    DECLARATION OF A DISASTER
    In the United States, the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, passed by Congress
    5
    in 1988 and amended in 2000, provides for federal government assistance to state and local governments to
    help them manage major disasters and emergencies.
    Under the Stafford Act, the president may provide federal resources, medicine, food and other consumables,
    work assistance, and financial relief (Stafford Act). On
    average, 38 presidential disaster declarations are made
    per year; most are made immediately following impact, and review of recent years’ data suggests that the
    number of disasters is increasing (see Table 1.1; Federal Emergency Management Agency [FEMA], 2007).
    If the consequences of a disaster are clear and imminent and warrant redeployment actions to lessen
    1.1
    Federally Declared Disasters
    1976–2007
    YEAR
    TOTAL DISASTER DECLARATIONS
    1976
    1977
    1978
    1979
    1980
    1981
    1982
    1983
    1984
    1985
    1986
    1987
    1988
    1989
    1990
    1991
    1992
    1993
    1994
    1995
    1996
    1997
    1998
    1999
    2000
    2001
    2002
    2003
    2004
    2005
    2006
    2007
    30
    22
    25
    42
    23
    15
    24
    21
    34
    27
    28
    23
    11
    31
    38
    43
    45
    32
    36
    32
    75
    44
    65
    50
    45
    45
    49
    56
    68
    48
    52
    14 (as of March, 2007)
    Total
    1,193
    Average
    38
    Source: Federal Emergency Management Agency (2007). Retrieved
    3/07/07 from http://www.fema.gov/news/disaster totals annual.fema
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    Part I Disaster Preparedness
    Figure 1.1 Billion dollar U.S. weather disasters, 1980–2004—National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
    Source: Retrieved from the World Wide Web 5/10/06 at http://www.1.nedc.noaa.gov/pub/data/special/billion2004.pdf
    or avert the intensity of the threat, a state’s governor may request assistance even before the disaster
    has occurred. A library of all past and current federally declared disasters in the United States can be located at the FEMA Web site (http://www.fema.gov/
    library/dizandemer.shtm). A current list of international
    declared disasters and emergencies and links to disease
    outbreaks can be located on the World Health Organization’s Web site (http://www.who.int/health topics/
    disasters/en/).
    HEALTH EFFECTS OF DISASTERS
    Disasters affect communities and their populations in
    different ways. Damaged and collapsed buildings are evidence of physical destruction. Roads, bridges, tunnels,
    rail lines, telephone and cable lines, and other transportation and communication links are often destroyed.
    Public utilities (e.g., water, gas, electricity, and sewage
    disposal) may be disrupted. A substantial percentage of
    the population may be rendered homeless and forced to
    relocate temporarily or permanently. Disasters damage
    and destroy businesses and industry, agriculture, and
    the economic foundation of the community. The impact of weather disasters alone has generated costs of
    over a billion dollars (see Figure 1.1). The federal government committed $85 billion to recovery efforts for
    Hurricane Katrina alone. The health effects of disasters
    may be extensive and broad in their distribution across
    populations (see chapter 8 for further discussion). In
    addition to causing illness and injury, disasters disrupt
    access to primary care and preventive services. Depending on the nature and location of the disaster, its effects
    on the short- and long-term health of a population may
    be difficult to measure.
    Epidemiology, as classically defined, is the quantitative study of the distributions and determinants of
    health-related events in human populations (Gordis,
    2004; see chapter 15 for further discussion). Disaster
    epidemiology is the measurement of the adverse health
    effects of natural and human-generated disasters and
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    Chapter 1 Essentials of Disaster Planning
    the factors that contribute to those effects, with the
    overall objective of assessing the needs of disasteraffected populations, matching available resources to
    needs, preventing further adverse health effects, evaluating program effectiveness, and planning for contingencies (Lechat, 1990; Noji, 1996). Disasters affect
    the health status of a community in the following
    ways:
    ■ Disasters may cause premature deaths, illnesses, and
    injuries in the affected community, generally exceeding the capacity of the local health care system.
    ■ Disasters may destroy the local health care infrastructure, which will therefore be unable to respond to the
    emergency. Disruption of routine health care services
    and prevention initiatives may lead to long-term consequences in health outcomes in terms of increased
    morbidity and mortality.
    ■ Disasters may create environmental imbalances, increasing the risk of communicable diseases and environmental hazards.
    ■ Disasters may affect the psychological, emotional,
    and social well-being of the population in the affected
    community. Depending on the specific nature of the
    disaster, responses may range from fear, anxiety, and
    depression to widespread panic and terror.
    ■ Disasters may cause shortages of food and cause severe nutritional deficiencies.
    ■ Disasters may cause large population movements
    (refugees) creating a burden on other health care systems and communities. Displaced populations and
    their host communities are at increased risk for communicable diseases and the health consequences of
    crowded living conditions. (Noji, 1996)
    THE DISASTER CONTINUUM
    The life cycle of a disaster is generally referred to as the
    disaster continuum, or emergency management cycle.
    This life cycle is characterized by three major phases,
    preimpact (before), impact (during), and postimpact (after), and provide the foundation for the disaster time
    line (Figure 1.2). Specific actions taken during these
    three phases, along with the nature and scope of the
    planning, will affect the extent of the illness, injury, and
    death that occurs.
    The five basic phases of a disaster management program include preparedness, mitigation, response, recovery, and evaluation (Kim & Proctor, 2002; Landesman,
    2001). There is a degree of overlap across phases, but
    each phase has distinct activities associated with it.
    Preparedness refers to the proactive planning efforts
    designed to structure the disaster response prior to its
    occurrence. Disaster planning encompasses evaluating
    potential vulnerabilities (assessment of risk) and the
    7
    propensity for a disaster to occur. Warning (also known
    as forecasting) refers to monitoring events to look for
    indicators that predict the location, timing, and magnitude of future disasters.
    Mitigation includes measures taken to reduce the
    harmful effects of a disaster by attempting to limit its
    impact on human health, community function, and economic infrastructure. These are all steps that are taken
    to lessen the impact of a disaster should one occur and
    can be considered as prevention measures. Prevention
    refers to a broad range of activities, such as attempts
    to prevent a disaster from occurring, and any actions
    taken to prevent further disease, disability, or loss of
    life. Mitigation usually requires a significant amount of
    forethought, planning, and implementation of measures
    before the incident occurs.
    The response phase is the actual implementation of
    the disaster plan. Disaster response, or emergency management, is the organization of activities used to address the event. Traditionally, the emergency management field has organized its activities in sectors, such as
    fire, police, hazardous materials management (hazmat),
    and emergency medical services. The response phase
    focuses primarily on emergency relief: saving lives, providing first aid, minimizing and restoring damaged systems such as communications and transportation, and
    providing care and basic life requirements to victims
    (food, water, and shelter). Disaster response plans are
    most successful if they are clear and specific, simple to
    understand, use an incident command system, are routinely practiced, and updated as needed. Response activities need to be continually evaluated and adjusted to
    the changing situation.
    Recovery actions focus on stabilizing and returning the community (or an organization) to normal (its
    preimpact status). This can range from rebuilding damaged buildings and repairing infrastructure, to relocating
    populations and instituting mental health interventions.
    Rehabilitation and reconstruction involve numerous
    activities to counter the long-term effects of the disaster
    on the community and future development.
    Evaluation is the phase of disaster planning and response that often receives the least attention. After a
    disaster, it is essential that evaluations be conducted to
    determine what worked, what did not work, and what
    specific problems, issues, and challenges were identified. Future disaster planning needs to be based on empirical evidence derived from previous disasters.
    DISASTER PLANNING
    Effective disaster planning addresses the problems
    posed by various potential events, ranging in scale from
    mass casualty incidents, such as motor vehicle collisions
    with multiple victims, to extensive flooding or earthquake damage, to armed conflicts and acts of terrorism
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    Part I Disaster Preparedness
    Figure 1.2 Disaster nursing timeline.
    Copyright Tener Goodwin Veenema, PhD, MPH, MS, CPNP
    (Gans, 2001). The disaster-planning continuum is broad
    in scope and must address collaboration across agencies and organizations, advance preparations, as well
    as needs assessments, event management, and recovery
    efforts. Although public attention frequently focuses on
    medical casualties, it is imperative to consider numerous other factors when disaster plans and responses are
    being designed and developed. Participation by nurses
    in all phases of disaster planning is critical to ensure
    that nurses are aware of and prepared to deal with whatever these numerous other factors may turn out to be.
    Individuals and organizations responsible for disaster
    plans should consider all possible eventualities—from
    the sanitation needs of crowds at mass gatherings, to the
    psychosocial needs of vulnerable populations, to evacuation procedures for buildings and geographic areas—
    when designing a detailed response (Leonard, 1991; Parillo, 1995). Completion of the disaster planning process
    should result in the production of a comprehensive disaster or “emergency operations plan.”
    TYPES OF DISASTER PLANNING
    The two major types of disaster plans are those that
    take the agent-specific approach and those that use the
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    Chapter 1 Essentials of Disaster Planning
    all-hazards approach. Communities that embrace the
    agent-specific approach focus their preparedness activities on the most likely threats to occur based on their
    geographic location (e.g., hurricanes in Florida). The
    all-hazards approach is a conceptual model for disaster preparedness that incorporates disaster management
    components that are consistent across all major types
    of disaster events to maximize resources, expenditures,
    and planning efforts. It has been observed that despite
    their differences many disasters share similarities because certain challenges and similar tasks occur repeatedly and predictably. The Department of Homeland
    Security’s National Response Plan encourages all communities to prepare for disasters using the all-hazards
    approach instead of stand-alone plans, and the agency
    published its guidelines for all-hazards preparedness titled Guide for All-Hazards Emergency Operations Planning (1996). These guidelines are helpful in developing
    community emergency operations plans.
    Problems, issues, and challenges are commonly encountered across several types of disasters (Auf der
    Heide, 1996, 2002; Landesman, 2001). Frequently, these
    issues and challenges can be effectively addressed in
    core preparedness activities and include the following:
    1. Communication problems.
    2. Triage, transportation, and evacuation problems.
    3. Leadership issues.
    4. The management, security of, and distribution of
    resources at the disaster site.
    5. Advance warning systems and the effectiveness of
    warning messages.
    6. Coordination of search and rescue efforts.
    7. Media issues.
    8. Effective triage of patients (prioritization for care
    and transport of patients).
    9. Distribution of patients to hospitals in an equitable
    fashion.
    10. Patient identification and tracking.
    11. Damage or destruction of the health care infrastructure.
    12. Management of volunteers, donations, and other
    large numbers of resources.
    13. Organized improvisational response to the disruption of major systems.
    14. Finally, encountering overall resistance (apathy) to
    planning efforts. Auf der Heide states, “Interest in
    disaster preparedness is proportional to the recency
    and magnitude of the last disaster” (1989).
    CHALLENGES TO DISASTER PLANNING
    Adequate planning can address many of these issues
    in advance and even eliminate some as problems in the
    9
    Figure 1.3 New York, NY, October 5, 2001—The clean-up
    operation continues all through the week and weekend, with
    thousands of tons having been removed already.
    Photo by Andrea Booher/FEMA News Photo. Source: FEMA, 2001
    event of future disaster situations. Challenges to address
    proactively are discussed next.
    Communication, sharing information among organizations and across many people, is a major priority
    in any disaster planning initiative. Failure of the communication system may occur in the event of a disaster, as a result of damage to the infrastructure caused
    by the disaster, as well as lack of operator familiarity,
    excessive demands, inadequate supplies, and lack of
    integration with other communications providers and
    technologies. Backup communications systems, such as
    wireless, hardwire, and cellular telephones, may reduce
    the impact of disrupted standard communications, but,
    frequently, even advanced technology has been ineffectual during disasters (Garshnek & Burkle, 1999). Alternative ways for the public, as well as health providers,
    to get accurate information is critically important. The
    9/11 World Trade Center disaster demonstrated the need
    for reliable communication systems such as two-way radios and assured backup systems (see Figure 1.3).
    A detailed process for the efficient and effective distribution of all types of resources, including supplemental personnel, equipment, and supplies among multiple organizations and the establishment of a security
    perimeter around a disaster site should also be included in the plan. Leadership responsibilities and coordination of all rescue efforts (across territories and
    jurisdictions) should be worked out in advance of any
    event.
    Advance warning systems and the use of evacuation from areas of danger save lives and should be included in community disaster response plans whenever
    appropriate. Warnings can now be made months in advance, in the case of El Niño, to seconds in advance
    of the arrival of earthquake waves at some distance
    from the earthquake. Computers are being programmed
    to respond to warnings automatically, shutting down
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    Part I Disaster Preparedness
    Figure 1.4 New Orleans, LA, September 9, 2005—Neighborhoods throughout the area remain flooded as a result of Hurricane Katrina. Crews work on areas where there have been
    breaks in the levee in order to avoid additional flooding.
    Photo by Jocelyn Augustino. Source: FEMA, 2005
    or appropriately modifying transportation systems, lifelines, and manufacturing processes. Warnings are becoming much more useful to society as lead time and
    reliability are improved and as society devises ways to
    respond effectively. Effective dissemination of warnings
    provides a way to reduce disaster losses that have been
    increasing in the United States as people move into atrisk areas (FEMA, 2000).
    A plan for the use of the mass media for the purpose
    of disseminating public health messages in the postimpact phase in order to avoid health problems (e.g., water
    safety, food contamination) should be developed in advance. Nurses and other disaster responders may need
    training in how to interact effectively with the media.
    (See chapter 5 for further discussion.)
    A comprehensive disaster plan will account for the
    effective triage of patients (prioritization for care and
    transport of patients) and distribution of patients to hospitals (a coordinated, even distribution of patients to
    several hospitals as opposed to delivering most of the
    patients to the closest hospital). Review of previous disaster response efforts reveals that patients are frequently
    transferred without adequate triage and that patient
    distribution to existing health care facilities is often
    grossly unequal and uncoordinated (Auf der Heide,
    1996, 2002).
    Disaster planning must include a community mutual aid plan in the event that the hospital(s), nursing
    home(s), or other residential health care facility needs to
    be evacuated. Plans for evacuation of health care facilities must be realistic and achievable, and contain sufficient specific detail as to where patients will be relocated
    to and who will be there to care for them. Patient evacuation was a major challenge to disaster response efforts
    following Hurricane Katrina, and was hampered by the
    destruction of all major transportation routes in and out
    of the city. Pre-planning for the possibility of the need
    to evacuate entire health care facilities must address alternative modes of transportation and include adequate
    security measures (see Figure 1.4).
    For large-scale disasters involving a broad geographic region, disaster-medical aid-centers may need
    to be established and evenly spaced throughout a community. These disaster-medical aid-centers are provided
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    11
    HAZARD IDENTIFICATION,
    VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS,
    AND RISK ASSESSMENT
    Figure 1.5 New Orleans, LA, August 31, 2005—People walk
    through the New Orleans floodwaters to get to higher ground.
    New Orleans was under a mandatory evacuation order as a
    result of flooding caused by Hurricane Katrina.
    Photo by Marty Bahamonde. Source: FEMA, 2005
    in addition to existing emergency medical services and
    should be set up no more than an hour’s walk from any
    location involved in the disaster to ensure maximum accessibility (Schultz, Koenig, & Noji, 1996). Casualty collection points for both patients and health care providers
    may also need to be established in large-scale events
    (see Figure 1.5). Potential collection points may include
    golf courses and shopping malls, or any large expanse of
    open land capable of accommodating both ground and
    air transport to serve as a staging area (Schultz et al.,
    1996).
    Information systems need to be identified or developed that will track patients across multiple (and perhaps temporary) settings. Patient tracking during disasters is a major challenge because of lack of registration
    at shelters, and hospital communication systems that
    do not interface with other hospitals or county health
    departments. Family reunification was a major issue
    following hurricanes Katrina and Rita, and has persisted as a major challenge to meaningful recovery initiatives.
    Hazard identification and mapping, vulnerability analysis, and risk assessment are the three cornerstone methods of data collection for disaster planning (see Table
    1.2). The first step in effective disaster planning requires
    advance identification of potential problems for the institution or community involved (Gans, 2001). Different
    types of disasters are associated with distinct patterns
    of illness and injuries, and limited predictions of these
    health outcomes can sometimes be made in advance,
    with appropriate and adequate data. Hazards are situations or items that create danger and the potential for
    the disaster to occur. Hazard identification and analysis
    is the method by which planners identify which events
    are most likely to affect a community and serves as the
    foundation for decision making for prevention, mitigation, and response. Hazards may include items such
    as chemicals used by local industry; transportation elements such as subways, airports, and railroad stations;
    or collections of large groups of people in areas with
    limited access, such as skyscrapers, nursing homes, or
    sports stadiums (see Table 1.3). Environmental and meteorological hazards must also be considered, such as
    the presence of fault lines and seismic zones and the
    seasonal risks posed by blizzards, ice storms, tornadoes,
    hurricanes, wildfires, and heat waves. The National Fire
    Protection Association’s Technical Committee on Disaster Management issued international codes and standards that require a community’s hazard identification
    to include all natural, technological, and human hazards (NFPA, 2004).
    Vulnerability is the “state of being vulnerable—
    open to attack, hurt, or injury” (Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 2002). The disaster planning team
    must identify vulnerable groups of people—those at particular risk of injury, death, or loss of property from each
    hazard. Vulnerability analysis can provide predictions
    of what individuals or groups of individuals are most
    likely to be affected, what property is most likely to sustain damage or be destroyed, and what resources will be
    available to mitigate the effects of the disaster. Vulnerability analysis should be conducted for each hazard that
    is identified and must be regularly updated to accommodate population shifts and changes in the environment
    (Landesman, 2001).
    Risk assessment is an essential feature of disaster
    planning and is in essence a calculation or model of
    risk, in which a comprehensive inventory is created
    including all existing and potential dangers, the population most likely to be affected by each danger, and
    a prediction of the health consequences. Risk analysis
    uses the elements of hazard analysis and vulnerability
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    Part I Disaster Preparedness
    1.2
    Methods for Data Collection for
    Disaster Planning
    HAZARD IDENTIFICATION AND MAPPING
    Hazard identification is used to determine which events are most
    likely to affect a community and to make decisions about who or
    what to protect as the basis of establishing measures for
    prevention, mitigation, and response. Historical data and data
    from other sources are collected to identify previous and
    potential hazards. Data are then mapped using aerial
    photography, satellite imagery, remote sensing, and geographic
    information systems.
    VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
    Vulnerability analysis is used to determine who is most likely to
    be affected, the property most likely to be damaged or destroyed,
    and the capacity of the community to deal with the effects of the
    disaster. Data are collected regarding the susceptibility of
    individuals, property, and the environment to potential hazards in
    order to develop prevention strategies. A separate vulnerability
    analysis should be conducted for each identified hazard.
    RISK ASSESSMENT
    Risk assessment uses the results of the hazard identification and
    vulnerability analysis to determine the probability of a specified
    outcome from a given hazard that affects a community with
    known vulnerabilities and coping mechanisms (risk equals
    hazard times vulnerability). The probability may be presented as
    a numerical range (i.e., 30% to 40% probability) or in relative
    terms (i.e., low, moderate, or high risk). Major objectives of risk
    assessment include
    ■ Determining a community’s risk of adverse health effects due
    to a specified disaster (i.e., traumatic deaths and injuries following an earthquake)
    ■ Identifying the major hazards facing the community and their
    sources (i.e., earthquakes, floods, industrial accidents)
    ■ Identifying those sections of the community most likely to be
    affected by a particular hazard (i.e., individuals living in or near
    flood plains)
    ■ Determining existing measures and resources that reduce the
    impact of a given hazard (i.e., building codes and regulations
    for earthquake mitigation)
    ■ Determining areas that require strengthening to prevent or
    mitigate the effects of the hazard
    Source: Information obtained from Landesman, L. (2001). Chapter 5: Hazard assessment, vulnerability analysis, risk assessment and rapid health
    assessment. In Public health management of disasters: The practice guide.
    Washington, DC: American Public Health Association. The author gratefully acknowledges Dr. Linda Landesman and the American Public Health
    Association for permission to reproduce this work.
    1.3
    Hazard Analysis
    Natural Events
    Drought
    Wildfire (e.g., forest, range)
    Avalanche
    Winter storms/blizzard: Snow, ice, hail
    Tsunami
    Windstorm/typhoon/cyclone
    Hurricane/typhoon/cyclone
    Biological event
    Heat wave
    Extreme cold
    Flood or wind-driven water
    Earthquake
    Volcanic eruption
    Tornado
    Landslide or mudslide
    Dust or sand storm
    Lightning storm
    Technological events
    Hazardous material release
    Explosion or fire
    Transportation accident (rail, subway, bridge, airplane)
    Building or structure collapse
    Power or utility failure
    Extreme air pollution
    Radiological accident (industry, medical, nuclear power plant)
    Dam or levee failure
    Fuel or resource shortage
    Industrial collapse
    Communication disruption
    Human events
    Economic failures
    General strikes
    Terrorism (e.g., ecological, cyber, nuclear, biological, chemical)
    Sabotage, bombs
    Hostage situation
    Civil unrest
    Enemy attack
    Arson
    Mass hysteria/panic
    Special events (mass gatherings, concerts, sporting events,
    political gatherings)
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    Chapter 1 Essentials of Disaster Planning
    analysis to identify groups of people at particular risk
    of injury or death from each individual hazard. The calculation of estimated risk (probability estimate) may be
    constant over time, or it may vary by time of day, season, or location relative to the community (Gans, 2001).
    Risk assessment necessitates the cooperation of corporate, governmental, and community groups to produce a
    comprehensive listing of all potential hazards (Leonard,
    1991; Waeckerle, 1991).
    The following disaster prevention measures can be
    implemented following the analysis of hazards, vulnerability, and risk:
    ■ Prevention or removal of hazard (e.g., closing down
    an aging industrial facility that cannot implement
    safety regulations).
    ■ Removal of at-risk populations from the hazard (e.g.,
    evacuating populations prior to the impact of a hurricane; resettling communities away from flood-prone
    areas).
    ■ Provision of public information and education (e.g.,
    providing information concerning measures that the
    public can take to protect themselves during a tornado).
    ■ Establishment of early warning systems (e.g., using
    satellite data about an approaching hurricane for public service announcements).
    ■ Mitigation of vulnerabilities (e.g., sensors for ventilation systems capable of detecting deviations from
    normal conditions; sensors to check food, water, currency, and mail for contamination).
    ■ Reduction of risk posed by some hazards (e.g., relocating a chemical depot farther away from a school
    to reduce the risk that children would be exposed to
    hazardous materials; enforcing strict building regulations in an earthquake-prone zone).
    ■ Enhancement of a local community’s capacity to respond (e.g., health care coordination across the entire health community, including health departments,
    hospitals, clinics, and home care agencies).
    Regardless of the type of approach used by planners
    (agent-specific or all-hazard), all hazards and potential
    dangers should be identified before an effective disaster
    response can be planned.
    CAPACITY TO RESPOND
    Resource identification is an essential feature of disaster planning. A community’s capacity to withstand a
    disaster is directly related to the type and scope of resources available, the presence of adequate communication systems, the structural integrity of its buildings
    and utilities (e.g., water, electricity), and the size and
    sophistication of its health care system (Cuny, 1998;
    13
    Gans, 2001). Resources include both human and physical elements, such as organizations with specialized
    personnel and equipment. Disaster preparedness should
    include assembling lists of health care facilities; medical, nursing, and emergency responder groups; public works and other civic departments; and volunteer
    agencies, along with phone numbers and key contact
    personnel for each. Hospitals, clinics, physician offices,
    mental health facilities, nursing homes, and home care
    agencies must all have the capacity to ensure continuity
    of patient care despite damage to utilities, communication systems, or their physical plant. Communication
    systems must be put in place so that hospitals, health
    departments, and other agencies both locally and regionally, can effectively communicate with each other
    and share information about patients in the event of
    a disaster. Within hospitals, departments should have
    readily available a complete record of all personnel,
    including home addresses and home, pager, and cellular phone numbers to ensure access 24 hours a day.
    Resource availability will vary with factors such as time
    of day, season, and reductions in the workforce. Creativity may be needed in identifying and mobilizing human
    resources to ensure an adequate workforce (see Case
    Study 1.1). Disaster plans must also include alternative
    treatment sites in the event of damage to existing health
    care facilities or in order to expand the surge capacity
    of the present health care system.
    Coordination between agencies is also necessary to
    avoid chaos if multiple volunteers respond to the disaster and are not directed and adequately supervised. As
    with the 9/11 disaster, many national health care workers and emergency medica…

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