Literature DB >> 12357562

Disaster medicine in the 21st century: future hazards, vulnerabilities, and risk.

Jeffrey L Arnold1.   

Abstract

The prediction of future disasters drives the priorities, urgencies, and perceived adequacies of disaster management, public policy, and government funding. Disasters always arise from some fundamental dysequilibrium between hazards in the environment and the vulnerabilities of human communities. Understanding the major factors that will tend to produce hazards and vulnerabilities in the future plays a key role in disaster risk assessment. The factors tending to produce hazards in the 21st Century include population growth, environmental degradation, infectious agents (including biological warfare agents), hazardous materials (industrial chemicals, chemical warfare agents, nuclear materials, and hazardous waste), economic imbalance (usually within countries), and cultural tribalism. The factors tending to generate vulnerabilities to hazardous events include population growth, aging populations, poverty, maldistribution of populations to disaster-prone areas, urbanization, marginalization of populations to informal settlements within urban areas, and structural vulnerability. An increasing global interconnectedness also will bring hazards and vulnerabilities together in unique ways to produce familiar disasters in unfamiliar forms and unfamiliar disasters in forms not yet imagined. Despite concerns about novel disasters, many of the disasters common today also will be common tomorrow. The risk of any given disaster is modifiable through its manageability. Effective disaster management has the potential to counter many of the factors tending to produce future hazards and vulnerabilities. Hazard mitigation and vulnerability reduction based on a clear understanding of the complex causal chains that comprise disasters will be critical in the complex world of the 21st Century.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12357562     DOI: 10.1017/s1049023x00000042

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prehosp Disaster Med        ISSN: 1049-023X            Impact factor:   2.040


  11 in total

Review 1.  Household emergency preparedness: a literature review.

Authors:  Joëlle Levac; Darene Toal-Sullivan; Tracey L O'Sullivan
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  2012-06

2.  Providing shelter to nursing home evacuees in disasters: lessons from Hurricane Katrina.

Authors:  Sarah B Laditka; James N Laditka; Sudha Xirasagar; Carol B Cornman; Courtney B Davis; Jane V E Richter
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2008-01-02       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 3.  Geoenvironmental diabetology.

Authors:  Curtiss B Cook; Kay E Wellik; Margaret Fowke
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2011-07-01

4.  Secondary surge capacity: a framework for understanding long-term access to primary care for medically vulnerable populations in disaster recovery.

Authors:  Jennifer Davis Runkle; Amy Brock-Martin; Wilfried Karmaus; Erik R Svendsen
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2012-10-18       Impact factor: 9.308

5.  Creating a regional pediatric medical disaster preparedness network: imperative and issues.

Authors:  Peter M Ginter; Martha Slay Wingate; Andrew C Rucks; Rachel D Vásconez; Lisa C McCormick; Stephen Baldwin; Crayton A Fargason
Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  2006-06-06

6.  Risk of mortality during and after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami among older coastal residents.

Authors:  Jun Aida; Hiroyuki Hikichi; Yusuke Matsuyama; Yukihiro Sato; Toru Tsuboya; Takahiro Tabuchi; Shihoko Koyama; S V Subramanian; Katsunori Kondo; Ken Osaka; Ichiro Kawachi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-11-29       Impact factor: 4.379

7.  Strengthening Public Health Partnerships in India: Envisioning the Role of Law Enforcement During Public Health Emergencies.

Authors:  Rachit Sharma; Md Mahbub Hossain
Journal:  Indian J Community Med       Date:  2019 Jul-Sep

8.  Regional coordination in medical emergencies and major incidents; plan, execute and teach.

Authors:  Amir Khorram-Manesh; Annika Hedelin; Per Ortenwall
Journal:  Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med       Date:  2009-07-20       Impact factor: 2.953

9.  Preparedness lessons from modern disasters and wars.

Authors:  Saqib I Dara; J Christopher Farmer
Journal:  Crit Care Clin       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 3.598

10.  Dying and caring on the edge: Taiwan's surviving nurses' reflections on taking care of patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome.

Authors:  Fu-Jin Shih; Meei-Ling Gau; Ching-Chiu Kao; Chyn-Yng Yang; Yaw-Sheng Lin; Yen-Chi Liao; Shuh-Jen Sheu
Journal:  Appl Nurs Res       Date:  2007-11       Impact factor: 2.257

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