Literature DB >> 18562943

Impact of public health emergencies on modern disaster taxonomy, planning, and response.

Frederick M Burkle1, P Gregg Greenough.   

Abstract

Current disaster taxonomy describes diversity, distinguishing characteristics, and common relations in disaster event classifications. The impact of compromised public health infrastructure and systems on health consequences defines and greatly influences the manner in which disasters are observed, planned for, and managed, especially those that are geographically widespread, population dense, and prolonged. What may first result in direct injuries and death may rapidly change to excess indirect illness and subsequent death as essential public health resources are destroyed, deteriorate, or are systematically denied to vulnerable populations. Public health and public health infrastructure and systems in developed and developing countries must be seen as strategic and security issues that deserve international public health resource monitoring attention from disaster managers, urban planners, the global humanitarian community, World Health Organization authorities, and participating parties to war and conflict. We posit here that disaster frameworks be reformed to emphasize and clarify the relation of public health emergencies and modern disasters.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18562943     DOI: 10.1097/DMP.0b013e3181809455

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Disaster Med Public Health Prep        ISSN: 1935-7893            Impact factor:   1.385


  9 in total

Review 1.  Engagement and education: care of the critically ill and injured during pandemics and disasters: CHEST consensus statement.

Authors:  Asha V Devereaux; Pritish K Tosh; John L Hick; Dan Hanfling; James Geiling; Mary Jane Reed; Timothy M Uyeki; Umair A Shah; Daniel B Fagbuyi; Peter Skippen; Jeffrey R Dichter; Niranjan Kissoon; Michael D Christian; Jeffrey S Upperman
Journal:  Chest       Date:  2014-10       Impact factor: 9.410

2.  Twitter as a Potential Disaster Risk Reduction Tool. Part IV: Competency-based Education and Training Guidelines to Promote Community Resiliency.

Authors:  Violet Yeager; Guy Paul Cooper; Frederick M Burkle; Italo Subbarao
Journal:  PLoS Curr       Date:  2015-06-29

3.  The Politics of Global Public Health in Fragile States and Ungoverned Territories.

Authors:  Frederick M Burkle
Journal:  PLoS Curr       Date:  2017-01-09

Review 4.  Justification for a Nuclear Global Health Workforce: multidisciplinary analysis of risk, survivability & preparedness, with emphasis on the triage management of thermal burns.

Authors:  Frederick M Burkle; Tom Potokar; James E Gosney; Cham Dallas
Journal:  Confl Health       Date:  2017-08-01       Impact factor: 2.723

5.  COVID-19: the perfect vector for a mental health epidemic.

Authors:  Idura N Hisham; Giles Townsend; Steve Gillard; Brishti Debnath; Jacqueline Sin
Journal:  BJPsych Bull       Date:  2020-06-01

6.  Political Intrusions into the International Health Regulations Treaty and Its Impact on Management of Rapidly Emerging Zoonotic Pandemics: What History Tells Us.

Authors:  Frederick M Burkle
Journal:  Prehosp Disaster Med       Date:  2020-04-13       Impact factor: 2.040

7.  Human Consequences of Multiple Nuclear Detonations in New Delhi (India): Interdisciplinary Requirements in Triage Management.

Authors:  Samir P Desai; William C Bell; Curtis Harris; Frederick M Burkle; Cham E Dallas
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-02-11       Impact factor: 3.390

8.  Utstein-style template for uniform data reporting of acute medical response in disasters.

Authors:  Michel Debacker; Ives Hubloue; Erwin Dhondt; Gerald Rockenschaub; Anders Rüter; Tudor Codreanu; Kristi L Koenig; Carl Schultz; Kobi Peleg; Pinchas Halpern; Samuel Stratton; Francesco Della Corte; Herman Delooz; Pier Luigi Ingrassia; Davide Colombo; Maaret Castrèn
Journal:  PLoS Curr       Date:  2012-03-23

9.  Risk factors and risk factor cascades for communicable disease outbreaks in complex humanitarian emergencies: a qualitative systematic review.

Authors:  Charlotte Christiane Hammer; Julii Brainard; Paul R Hunter
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2018-07-06
  9 in total

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