| Literature DB >> 35317871 |
Nasrin Sayfouri1, Mohammad Heidari2, Seyedeh Samaneh Miresmaeeli3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To review the articles dealing with the mutual impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the recent earthquakes to elicit the various scopes of the lessons learned including the challenges, the successful measures, and the recommendations.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Disasters; Earthquakes
Year: 2022 PMID: 35317871 PMCID: PMC9095856 DOI: 10.1017/dmp.2022.71
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Disaster Med Public Health Prep ISSN: 1935-7893 Impact factor: 5.556
Evacuation status under the condition of the COVID-19 pandemic
| Surveillance and information-sharing (public assistance) | Starting time of surveillance | In the case of COVID-19, which is regarded as an infection that is spread through contact or droplets, there is a risk of rapid spread from infected persons. |
| Therefore, a system is required that enables postdisaster surveillance to be carried out simultaneously with the establishment of evacuation centers. | ||
| Method of implementing surveillance | Continuous implementation of measures without omissions, even for small-scale evacuation centers and evacuees who are dispersed, is essential. | |
| Method of sharing information | A system for ensuring that information reaches evacuees, including those who are dispersed or in small-scale evacuation centers, is necessary. | |
| Evacuation center environment and stockpiled supplies (public assistance) | Evacuation space | 6m2 per person is required for securing 2 m of social distance. The number of individuals who can be accepted at evacuation centers will be approximately one-third of the number usually accepted, making it more difficult to secure evacuation space. |
| Spaces for isolation | Because droplets are the infectious agent, securing space for isolation is the most critical issue. | |
| Stockpiled supplies | During pandemics, masks and alcohol disinfectants are in short supply. | |
| Therefore, evacuees need to bring these items with them. | ||
| Community disaster risk reduction and community leadership (self-help and mutual assistance) | Sanitary environment | Hand hygiene that extends beyond conventional practices is necessary and is performed according to individual evacuees’ judgments and sense of responsibility. |
| Autonomous activity | Self-governance entailing residents’ leadership is challenging to implement in the case of dispersed evacuees. |
Note: Adapted from Sakamoto et al, 2020.
Search query used to detect the relevant studies
| Search operators | Search terms used |
|---|---|
| Boolean operators (AND, OR and NOT), parenthesis, and truncation | TS = ((COVID-19 |
Databases used and the number of the studies retrieved
| Database | Number of records |
|---|---|
| PubMed | 34 |
| Scopus | 15 |
| Web of Science | 49 |
| Google Scholar | 30 |
|
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|
Figure 1.Review selection process and results based on the PRISMA guidelines.
Earthquakes’ features pertinent to the COVID-19 era and the purposes of their associated selected studies
| No | Earthquake features | Purposes of the associated studies | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Earthquake location | Date of occurrence | Magnitude | Major earthquake features underscored in the reviewed study/studies | Study purpose | Publication date | |
| 1 | Albania | Nov 26, 2019 | 6.3 | Affected 202,000 people, including 51 victims, 17,000 displaced, 989 million Euros in damage. | To evaluate the long-term impacts of the earthquake and the COVID-19 events in the Albanian economy.
| 2020 |
| 2 | Croatia (Zagreb) | March 22, 2020 | 5.5 | Despite extensive damages, Croatia has survived due to well-organized public health system and coordinated outbreak response. | [To illustrate the dual management of the pandemic and the earthquake by the health-care system
| 2020 |
| 3 | The health disruption experienced by the high-risk cardiovascular patients due to the COVID-19 and the earthquake | To report how outpatient cardiovascular rehabilitation in Zagreb was adapted to the emerging conditions due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the large earthquake.
| 2021 | |||
| 4 | The exacerbation of existing mental health disorders and contribution to “new” stress-related mental health disruptions and disorders | The dual mental pressures of COVID-19 and earthquake.
| 2020 | |||
| 5 | The concurrence of meteorological and geological hazards interacting with COVID-19 impacts which will challenge the resilience of societies and systems | To discuss the issue of the cascading crises during the spread of COVID-19 pandemic.
| 2020 | |||
| 6 | The psychotic disorders during the time of the 2-fold simultaneous trauma; the COVID-19 pandemic and the devastating earthquake in Zagreb | To describe the functioning mode of 2 Day Hospitals for Early Intervention and Psychotic Disorders at Psychiatric Hospital “Sveti Ivan” during the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.
| 2020 | |||
| 7 | Mixed impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the earthquake on traffic flow | To introduce the application of Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) which can particularly be used in cases of postdisaster occurrences such as flood, fire, or earthquake.
| 2020 | |||
| 8 | Haiti | 2010 | 7 | Following Haiti earthquake, a cholera epidemic that killed thousands of residents was inadvertently started by United Nations’ aid workers. | To enlighten how the lesson learned in Haiti earthquake helped apply COVID-19 risk-reduction strategy during relief measures following Tropical Cyclone (TC) Harold.
| 2021 |
| 9 | Japan (Great East Japan Earthquake) | 2011 | After Japan Earthquake, pharmacists worked with local pharmaceutical wholesalers and other professionals to establish a supply system for drugs and sanitary materials | To show that the experience of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake (GEJE) will provide helpful information to better define the role of pharmacists in ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and future disasters.
| 2020 | |
| 10 | The residents of Fukuhsima are experiencing COVID-19 pandemic following 2011 Japan disaster, a complex disaster of earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear accident which caused subthreshold PTSD. | To discuss the effects of subthreshold PTSD in a previous disaster on an exacerbation of PTSD symptoms in another disaster.
| 2021 | |||
| 11 | The effects of 2011 Japan Earthquake and Covid-19 pandemic on industrial supply chains | A public policy analysis of mandatory annual disclosures for listed companies.
| 2021 | |||
| 12 | ||||||
| 13 | Mexico (La Crucecita, Oaxaca) | June 23, 2020 | 7.4 | During COVID-19 crisis, the earthquake triggered a tsunami which caused intertidal organism mortality. | To describe the details of the rapid response survey of the vertical coseismic deformation, tsunami, geologic effects, and lessons from working in the field during the COVID-19 crisis.
| 2021 |
| 14 | Nepal (Gorkha earthquakes) | 2015 | 7.6 | Nepal’s already strained health system was worsened by the damages due to the Gorkha earthquakes; and is inevitably going to be impaired by the current pandemic | To explore how the long-term impacts due to the earthquakes are compounded by the evolving current pandemic.
| 2020 |
| 15 | The fundamental role Nepalese women played in the country’s response to the natural disaster. | what lessons we can learn when confronting the country’s response to current COVID-19 global epidemic.
| 2020 | |||
| 16 | Viewing the 2 crises of 2015 Nepal earthquake and COVID-19 through the lens of politics of governance of crisis | To argue how the earthquake prompted many forma of citizen-centric politics of governance; forms we can witness in the immediate response to the global pandemic.
| 2020 | |||
| 17 | Comparing and contrasting Nepal earthquake in 2015 and the COVID-19 in terms of children or orphanage trafficking | To explain how each emergency has impacted children without parental care or at risk of family separation, with specific reference to orphanage trafficking, volunteerism, child institutionalization and family preservation.
| ||||
| 18 | Utah | March 18, 2020 | 5.7 | With estimates of $150 million U.S. in damage and a few injuries but no deaths, the earthquake was impacted by lockdown due to COVID-19, a toxic plume caused by the ground shaking, inclement weather, and a mountain lion. | To provide background on the planning and protocols for the COVID-19, to discuss the actual response; to provide details about the sequence, the design. and installation of the aftershock network, and coordination with partners and stakeholders; and to discuss public communication efforts.
| 2021 |
This is an implied purpose; not stated by the authors in the article.
Information categories and their frequencies presented for each earthquake
| Earthquake location | Challenges |
| Successful measures/response |
| Public cooperation |
| Recommendations |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albania | Economic decline in Postearthquake period due to COVID-19 | 2 | NA | NA | Ongoing reforms to system of economic governance | 1 | ||
| Providing economic basis for loss compensation through social productivity and sustainable economic development | 2 | |||||||
| Croatia | Reduction in health-care availability | 2 | coordinated outbreak response | 2 | Conscientious public compliance with social distancing and other preventive measures | 1 | Identification of probable natural disasters and advancing preparation accordingly | 1 |
| Acceleration of morbidity and mortality | 3 | |||||||
| Lifestyle deterioration of less resilient people | 1 | Outpatient rehabilitation measures for cardiovascular (CV) patients | 7 | Provision of psychological first-aid through telemedicine | 2 | |||
| Dual psychological pressures | 2 | |||||||
| Disruption of prevention protocols | 1 | Tele-psychiatry modalities | 3 | Radar detector for real-time traffic data collection in extraordinary situations | 2 | |||
| Disruption of commuting | 1 | |||||||
| Haiti | NA | Not allowing the foreigners to enter the country (Risk Reduction Strategy; lesson learned from the postearthquake cholera epidemic) | 1 | NA | Strict COVID-19 inspection of the entering national/international disaster-response personnel | 2 | ||
| The Government’s strict health protocols for all humanitarian cargos (Risk Reduction Strategy; lesson learned from the postearthquake cholera epidemic) | 1 | Well-publicized, strongly supported masking campaign | 1 | |||||
| Reducing the chances of inadvertent COVID-19 spread country (Risk Reduction Strategy; lesson learned from the postearthquake cholera epidemic) | 1 | |||||||
| Japan | Inefficient engagement of the pharmacists | 2 | NA | NA | Possible pharmacists’ roles during COVID-19 pandemic | 5 | ||
| Ineffective supply system distribution | 1 | Consciousness raising to mitigate the psychological impacts of the 2 disasters | 3 | |||||
| Exacerbation of initial symptoms of subthreshold PTSD | 3 | Establishing remote mental care support system | 1 | |||||
| Detrimental impacts of the 2 disasters on businesses | 4 | Possible businesses-sustaining measures | 4 | |||||
| Increased risk of infection transmission in evacuation centers | 1 | Possible community empowerment measures at evacuation centers | 2 | |||||
| Mexico | Travelling challenges | 2 | NA | Observing all essential preventive measures | 7 | NA | ||
| Nepal | Earthquake impacts worsening due to the pandemic | 1 | Innovations in effective child protection | 2 | Similar citizen-centric initiatives/politics in both crises | 3 | Immediate measures to support the health system | 1 |
| Inefficiency of Nepal’s health system | 1 | |||||||
| Escalation of vulnerability and poverty due to mobility restrictions | 1 | Recognizing the women’s capabilities for local mitigation planning of coronavirus impacts by remembering their key role in Nepal’s postearthquake recovery and resilience | 2 | |||||
| Risk of COVID-19 explosion due to poverty | 1 | Determining citizen-driven local Ombudsman to monitor the responses, use of funds, and recovery measures | 2 | |||||
| Impact of lockdown on economy, health, and rebuilding | 4 | Community-based civil society campaign to monitor government budget and expenditure, to conduct media scrutiny, focused on the conduct and performance of officials handling the response at national and local level | 2 | |||||
| Government’s inefficiency to alleviate the impacts of the pandemic | 3 | Citizen-driven forms of participatory and accountability politics to reveal governance weaknesses | 1 | |||||
| Nepal, unprepared for an infection outbreak due to being involved with 2015 earthquake | 2 | Embracing more responsibility by government actors in the absence of international interference | 1 | |||||
| Lack of international humanitarian response | 1 | |||||||
| Utah | NA | capability of our duty seismologists to work remotely | 1 | NA | Prior provision of necessary materials | 4 | ||
| Providing rapid and accurate information for the public | 2 | |||||||
| Providing continuous lines of data from aftershock stations (multi-layered communication network) | 1 | |||||||
| Having a plan, practicing it, and updating it! | 1 |
Themes derived from the challenges mentioned in the selected studies with their frequencies and the related earthquake locations
| No | Categories (derived from the challenges) |
| Related location | Themes of the challenges |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Reduction in health-care availability | 2 | Croatia | Management inefficiency challenges | 13 |
| 2 | Inefficient engagement of the pharmacists | 2 | Japan | ||
| 3 | Ineffective health-care supply system distribution | 1 | Japan | ||
| 4 | Inefficiency of Nepal’s health system | 1 | Nepal | ||
| 5 | Government’s inefficiency to manage the impacts of the pandemic | 4 | Nepal | ||
| 6 | Nepal, unprepared for an infection outbreak due to being involved with 2015 earthquake response | 2 | Nepal | ||
| 7 | Lack of humanitarian response | 1 | Nepal | ||
| 8 | Acceleration of morbidity and mortality | 3 | Croatia | COVID-19-health-related challenges | 6 |
| 9 | Increased risk of infection transmission in evacuation centers | 1 | Japan | ||
| 10 | Risk of COVID-19 explosion due to poverty | 1 | Nepal | ||
| 11 | Impact of lockdown on health due to absence of effective testing, tracking, and tracing strategies | 1 | Nepal | ||
| 12 | Economic decline in postearthquake period due to COVID-19 | 2 | Albania | Economic challenges | 9 |
| 13 | Detrimental impacts of the 2 disasters on businesses | 4 | Japan | ||
| 14 | Reduction of rebuilding budget due to lockdown | 2 | Nepal | ||
| 15 | Escalation of vulnerability and poverty due to mobility restrictions | 1 | Croatia | ||
| 16 | Lifestyle deterioration of less resilient people | 1 | Croatia | Socially related challenges | 9 |
| 17 | Disruption of prevention protocols | 1 | Croatia | ||
| 18 | Travelling challenges | 2 | Mexico | ||
| 19 | Disruption of traffic flow | 1 | Nepal | ||
| 20 | Earthquake impacts aggravation due to the pandemic | 1 | Nepal | ||
| 21 | Impact of lockdown on rebuilding | 2 | Nepal | ||
| 22 | Dual psychological pressures | 2 | Croatia | Dual psychological challenges | 5 |
| 23 | Exacerbation of initial symptoms of subthreshold PTSD | 3 | Japan |
Themes derived from the categories related to the efficient response measures found in the selected studies
| No. | Categories |
| location | Themes |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Coordinated outbreak response | 2 | Croatia | Health-care system measures | 12 |
| 2 | Outpatient rehabilitation measures for CV patients | 7 | Croatia | ||
| 3 | Tele-psychiatry modalities | 3 | Croatia | ||
| 4 | Not allowing the foreigners to enter the country | 1 | Haiti | Government’s measures | 4 |
| 5 | Strict health protocols for all humanitarian cargos | 1 | Haiti | ||
| 6 | Innovations in effective child protection | 2 | Nepal | ||
| 7 | Similar citizen-centric initiative/politics in both crises | 3 | Nepal | Community-based cooperative activities | 11 |
| 8 | Public compliance with preventive measures | 1 | Croatia | ||
| 9 | Observing all essential preventive measures | 7 | Mexico | ||
| 10 | Capability of seismologists to work remotely | 1 | Utah | Disaster management response | 1 |
Themes derived from the categories found in the recommendations in the selected studies
| No. | Categories (derived from the recommendations) |
| Location | Sub-themes | Major themes |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Identification of probable natural disasters and advancing preparation accordingly | 1 | Croatia | Identifying probable natural disasters | Mitigation phase | 1 |
| 2 | Radar detector for real-time traffic data collection in extraordinary situations | 2 | Croatia | Preparing necessary equipment | Preparedness phase | 2 |
| 3 | Expecting more earthquakes | 4 | Utah | |||
| 4 | Provision of psychological first-aid through telemedicine | 2 | Croatia | Mental care response measures | Response phase | 32 |
| 5 | Consciousness raising to mitigate the psychological impacts of the 2 disasters | 4 | Japan | |||
| 6 | Establishing remote mental care support system | 1 | Japan | |||
| 7 | Strict COVID-19 inspection of the entering national-international disaster-response personnel | 2 | Haiti | Healthcare-related COVID-19 curbing measures | ||
| 8 | Well-publicized, strongly supported masking campaign | 1 | Haiti | |||
| 9 | Use of pharmacists’ potentials during COVID-19 pandemic era | 5 | Japan | |||
| 10 | Possible community empowerment measures at evacuation centers | 2 | Japan | |||
| 11 | Immediate measures to support the health system to curb COVID-19 pandemic | 1 | Nepal | |||
| 12 | Possible business-sustaining measures | 4 | Japan | Economic improvement measures | ||
| 13 | Ongoing reforms to system of economic governance | 1 | Albania | |||
| 14 | loss compensation through social productivity | 2 | Albania | |||
| 15 | Recognizing the women’s capabilities for local mitigation planning by remembering their role in Nepal’s postearthquake recovery and resilience | 2 | Nepal | Recognizing Community-based capabilities | ||
| 16 | Determining citizen-driven local Ombudsman to monitor the responses, use of funds, and recovery measures | 2 | Nepal | |||
| 17 | Community-based civil society campaign to monitor government budget and expenditure, to conduct media scrutiny, focused on the conduct and performance of officials handling the response at national and local level | 2 | Nepal | |||
| 18 | Citizen-driven forms of participatory and accountability politics to reveal governance weaknesses | 1 | Nepal | |||
| 19 | Embracing more responsibility by government actors in the absence of international interference | 1 | Nepal | Government-related boosting measures | ||
| 20 | Providing rapid and accurate information for the public | 2 | Utah | |||
| 21 | Providing continuous lines of data from aftershock stations (multi-layered communication network) | 1 | Utah | |||
| 22 | Having a plan, practicing it, and updating it! | 1 | Utah |
Figure 2.The 4 phases of comprehensive emergency management (Hoyle Sr, 2010).