Disaster medicine:
"This brand-new reference offers comprehensive yet succinct guidance on the preparation, assessment, and management of a full range of disasters, both natural and man-made (including the threat of terrorist attack and the use of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapon systems.) Dr. Ciottone -...
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Philadelphia, Pa.
Elsevier, Mosby
2006
|
Ausgabe: | 3. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "This brand-new reference offers comprehensive yet succinct guidance on the preparation, assessment, and management of a full range of disasters, both natural and man-made (including the threat of terrorist attack and the use of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapon systems.) Dr. Ciottone - recognized worldwide as an authority in the field - presents a full range of coverage from the basics of disaster medicine to more advanced concepts, such as tactical EMS, hazard vulnerability analysis, impact of disaster on children, and more." "Part 1 of the book gives you an "A-Z" source for information on every aspect of disaster medicine and management. Part 2 features an exhaustive compilation of every conceivable disaster event, organized to facilitate fast reference in a real-time setting. Part 2 also serves as your quick consult on disaster medicine. "This new volume includes Individual Concepts and Events sections that provide information on the general approach to disaster medicine and practical information on specific disasters. You'll also find an exhaustive list of chapters on the conceivable chemical and biologic weapons known today, as well as strategies for the management of future events, or possible scenarios, for which there is no precedent."--BOOK JACKET |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XXXI, 952 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0323032532 9780323032537 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Disaster medicine |c Gregory R. Ciottone [ed.-in-chief] |
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264 | 1 | |a Philadelphia, Pa. |b Elsevier, Mosby |c 2006 | |
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500 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index | ||
520 | 1 | |a "This brand-new reference offers comprehensive yet succinct guidance on the preparation, assessment, and management of a full range of disasters, both natural and man-made (including the threat of terrorist attack and the use of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapon systems.) Dr. Ciottone - recognized worldwide as an authority in the field - presents a full range of coverage from the basics of disaster medicine to more advanced concepts, such as tactical EMS, hazard vulnerability analysis, impact of disaster on children, and more." "Part 1 of the book gives you an "A-Z" source for information on every aspect of disaster medicine and management. Part 2 features an exhaustive compilation of every conceivable disaster event, organized to facilitate fast reference in a real-time setting. Part 2 also serves as your quick consult on disaster medicine. | |
520 | |a "This new volume includes Individual Concepts and Events sections that provide information on the general approach to disaster medicine and practical information on specific disasters. You'll also find an exhaustive list of chapters on the conceivable chemical and biologic weapons known today, as well as strategies for the management of future events, or possible scenarios, for which there is no precedent."--BOOK JACKET | ||
650 | 4 | |a Disaster medicine | |
650 | 4 | |a Disaster Planning |x methods | |
650 | 4 | |a Accidents, Radiation |x prevention & control | |
650 | 4 | |a Bioterrorism |x prevention & control | |
650 | 4 | |a Emergency Medical Services |x methods | |
650 | 4 | |a Natural Disasters | |
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999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016463293 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804137595962130432 |
---|---|
adam_text | CONTENTS
PART I • Overview of Disaster Management
1 Introduction to Disaster Medicine 3
Gregory R. Ciottone
Section One • Introduction
2 Public Health and Disasters 7
Catherine Y. Lee and James Michael Riley
3 The Role of Emergency Medical Services
(EMS) in Disaster 20
Robert D. Furberg and David £ Marcozzi
4 Role of Emergency Medicine in Disaster 26
Management
Andrew I. Bern
5 The Role of Hospitals in Disaster 34
Mary W. Chaffee and Neill S. Oster
6 Complex Emergencies 43
Frederick M. Burkle, Jr. and P. Gregg Greenough
7 Children and Disaster 51
Bruce M. Becker
8 Psychological Impact of Disaster 59
Tracy £ Wimbush and Christo C. Courban
9 Ethical Issues in the Provision of Emergency
Medical Care in Multiple Casualty Incidents
and Disasters 63
Pinchas Halpern and Gregory L Larkin
10 Liability Issues in Emergency Response 71
Abigail Williams
Section Two • Governmental Resources
11 Disaster Response in the United States 79
Jerry L Mothershead
12 Local Disaster Response 84
Jerry L Mothershead
13 Disaster Planning: State Programs and
Response 90
Esther H. Chen, Bruce Y. Lee, and Jerry L. Mothershead
14 Selected Federal Disaster Response Agencies
and Capabilities 95
Jerry L Mothershead, Kevin Yeskey, and Peter Brewster
15 International Disaster Response 102
Dan Hanfling, Craig H. Llewellyn, and Frederick M. Burkle, Jr.
16 Disaster/Emergency Management Programs 108
Peter Brewster
Section Three • Pre-Event Topics
17 Community Hazard Vulnerability Assessment 112
James C. Chang
18 Health Care Facility Hazard and Vulnerability
Analysis 117
James C. Chang, William Gluckman, and Eric S. Weinstein
19 Public Information Management 124
Sharon Dilling, William Gluckman, Marc
S. Rosenthal, and Eric S. Weinstein
20 Informatics and Telecommunications in
Disaster 130
Churton Budd
21 Disaster Mitigation 139
Robert M. Gougelet
22 Vaccines 145
Kent J. Stock
23 Occupational Medicine: An Asset in
Time of Crisis 152
Tee L Guidotti
24 Worker Health and Safety in
Disaster Response 157
Clifford S. Mitchell, Brian J. Maguire, and Tee L Guidotti
25 Disaster Preparedness 164
Mark E. Keim and Paul Giannone
26 Policy Issues in Disaster Preparedness and
Response 174
Eric S. Weinstein
27 Mutual Aid 182
James Geiling and Kerry Fosher
28 Surge Capacity 193
Julie Ann P. Casani and Albert J. Romanosky
Section Four (Part One} • Event Response
Topics
29 Operations and Logistics 203
David Jaslow
30 The Incident Command System 208
Nicholas Sutingco
31 Scene Safety in Disaster Response 215
Robert L Freitas
32 Needs Assessment 224
Shan W. Liu
xxvii
33 Disaster Communications 229
Khama D. Ennis-Holcombe
34 Media Relations 232
Daniel F. Noltkamper
35 Managing Volunteers and Donations 238
Andrew M. Milsten
36 Personal Protective Equipment 246
John L Hick and Craig D. Thorne
37 Surveillance 255
P. Gregg Greenough and Frederick M. Burkle, Jr.
38 Management of Mass Fatalities 260
Nelson Tang and Chayan Dey
Section Four (Part Two) • Medical Operations
in Disasters
39 Disaster Management of Animals 264
James M. Burke
40 Urban Search and Rescue 269
Gregory R. Ciottone
41 Medical Care in Remote Areas 274
Thomas P. LeBosquet III and David £ Marcozzi
42 EMS Beyond the Barricade 278
Louis N. Molino, Sr.
43 Triage 283
Andrew Reisner
44 Patient Tracking Systems in Disasters 291
Charles Stewart
45 Tactical EMS 297
Jeffery C. Metzger and David £ Marcozzi
46 Infectious Disease in a Disaster Zone 302
Richard A. Tempel and David £ Marcozzi
47 Pharmaceuticals and Medical
Equipment in Disasters 308
Nicki Pesik and Susan £ Gorman
Section Five • Post-Event Topics
48 Displaced Populations 313
John D. Cahill
49 Rehabilitation and Reconstruction 317
Elizabeth Temin
50 Disaster Education and Research 322
Kenneth A. Williams, Leo Kobayashi, and Marc J. Shapiro
i
51 Practical Applications of Disaster
Epidemiology 327 •
P. Gregg Greenough and Frederick M. Burkle, Jr.
52 Measures of Effectiveness in
Disaster Management 333
Frederick M. Burkle, Jr. and P. Gregg Greenough
Section Six* Topics Unique to Terrorist Events
53 Lessons Learned as a Result of
Terrorist Attacks 335
Mark £ Keim
xxviii CONTENTS
54 The Psychology of Terrorism 347
Robert A. Ciottone
55 Medical Intelligence 354
Mark £ Keim
56 Thinking Outside the Box: Health Service 363
Support Considerations in the Era of
Asymmetrical Threats
Pietro D. Marghella and Duane C. Caneva
57 Accidental versus Intentional Event 369
Joanne Cono
58 Multimodality, Layered Attack 374
Nicholas Vincent Cagliuso
59 Operations Security, Site Security, and Incident
Response 382
Paul M. Maniscalco, Paul D. Kim, and Stephen F. Hood
60 Integration of Law Enforcement and Military
Resources with the Emergency Response to a
Terrorist Incident 391
Eric Sergienko
61 Nuclear Disaster Management 399
George A. Alexander
62 Chemical Attack 406
Duane C. Caneva
63 Biologic Attack 415
Andrew W. Artenstein
64 Future Biologic and Chemical Weapons 424
James M. Madsen and Robert G. Darling
65 Improvised Explosive Devices 434
Edward B. Lucci
66 Directed-Energy Weapons 441
M. Kathleen Stewart and Charles Stewart
67 Emergency Department Design 445
Robert H. Woolard
68 Chemical, Biologic, and Nuclear Quarantine 451
Patricia A. Nolan
69 Chemical Decontamination* 459
Barbara Vogt and John Sorensen
70 Radiation Decontamination 465
George A. Alexander
Part II • Management of Specific Event Types
Section Seven • Natural Disasters
71 Introduction to Natural Disasters 473
Debra D. Schnelle
72 Hurricanes, Cyclones, and Typhoons 475
Eric Sergienko
73 Earthquake 479
Bruce M. Becker
74 Tornado 484
Michael D. Jones and James Pfaff
75 Flood 489
Sylvia H. Kim
76 Tsunami 492
Prasanthi Ramanujam and Thea James
77 Heatwave 496
Alison Sisitsky
78 Winter Storm 499
Alison Sisitsky
79 Volcanic Eruption 502
Gregory Jay
80 Famine 506
Laura Macnow and Hilarie Cranmer
81 Landslides 509
Mark £ Keim
82 Avalanche 514
Jason A. Tracy
Section Eight: Nuclear/Radiation Events
83 Introduction to Nuclear/Radiologic Disasters 517
Dale M. Mole
84 Ionizing Radiation Incident 524
Carrie Barton
85 Nuclear Detonation 528
William £ Dickerson
86 Radiation Accident—IsolatedExposure 532
Jeanette A. Under and Lawrence S. Under
87 Radiation Accident—Dispersed Exposure 538
Jeanette A. Under and Lawrence S. Under
88 Nuclear Power Plant Meltdown 544
William Porcaro
Section Nine • Chemical Events
89 Introduction to Chemical Disasters 548
David Marcozzi
90 Industrial Chemical Disasters 556
Mark £ Keim
91 Nerve Agent Attack 563
David Davis and David Marcozzi
92 Vesicant Agent Attack 569
Lara K. Kulchycki
93 Respiratory Agent Attack (Toxic Inhalational
Injury) 573
Stephen J. Traub
94 Cyanide Attack 576
Mark £ Keim
95 Antimuscarinic Agent Attack 582
Fermin Barrueto, Jr., and Lewis S. Nelson
96 LSD, Other Indoles, and Phenylethylamine
Derivative Attack 585
Fiona £ Gallahue
97 Opioid Agent Attack 589
Rick G. Kulkarni
98 Riot-Control Agent Attack 593
Sam Shen
99 Nicotinic Agent Attack 596
Sage W. Wiener and Lewis S. Nelson
100 Anesthetic-Agent Attack 600
Kinjal N. Sethuraman and K. Sophia Dyer
Section Ten • Biologic Events
101 Introduction to Biologic Agents 605
Andrew S. Nugent and Eric W. Dickson
Section Ten (Part 0ne)» Bacterial Agents
102 Bacillus Anthmcts (Anthrax) Attack 608
Christo C. Courban
103 Yersinia Pestis (Plague) Attack 613
Jeremiah D. Schuur and Jonathan Harris Valente
104 Francisella Tularensis (Tularemia) Attack 617
Irving Jacoby
105 Brucella Species (Brucellosis) Attack 621
TeriggiJ. Ciccone
106 Coxiella burnetii (Q Fever) Attack 624
TeriggiJ. Ciccone
107 Rickettsia prowazekii Attack (Typhus Fever) 627
Vtttorio J. Ratio and Jonathan A. Edlow
108 Orientia tsutsugamushi (Scrub Typhus) 629
Attack
Peter B. Smulowitz and Jonathan A. Edlow
109 Rickettsia rickettsii (Rocky Mountain
Spotted Fever) Attack 632
Vittorio J. Ratio and Jonathan A. Edlow
110 Vibrio cholerae (Cholera) Attack 635
Milana Boukhman
111 Shigella dysenteriae {ShigeUosis) Attack 638
Suzanne M. Shepherd, Stephen 0. Cunnion, and
William H. Shoff
112 Salmonella Species (Salmonellosis) Attack 641
Sumeru Mehta and C. Crawford Mechem
113 Salmonella typhi (Typhoid Fever) Attack 644
Lawrence Proano
114 Burkholderia mallei (Glanders) Attack 647
Mark A. Graber
115 Burkholderia pseudomallei
(Melioidosis) Attack 650
Sean Montgomery
116 Chlamydia psittad (Psittacosis) Attack 653
Wans R. House
117 Escherichia coli O157:H7 (Hemorrhagic
E. Colt) Attack 657
Roy Karl Werner
Section Ten (Part Two) • Viral Agents
118 Viral Encephalitides (Alphaviruses) Attack 661
Matthew Berkman and Kelly J. Corrigan
CONTENTS xxix
119 Tick-Borne Encephalitis Virus Attack 661
Vittorio J. Raho
120 Viral Hemorrhagic Fever Virus Attack—
Arenaviruses 665
Sandra S. Yoon
121 Viral Hemorrhagic Fever
Attack—Bunya Virus 668
Sean Michael Siler
122 Viral Hemorrhagic Fever
Attack—Filo Viruses 671
William Porcaro
123 Viral Hemorrhagic Fever
Attack—Flaviviruses 674
John D. Cahill and James McKinnell
124 Chikungunya Virus Attack 678
Heather Long
125 Variola Major Virus (Smallpox) Attack 681
Robert G. Darling
126 Influenza Virus Attack 684
Anna I. Cheh
127 Monkeypox Attack 687
John D. Malone
128 Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome Attack 690
Bonnie H. Hartstein and Curtis J. Hunter
129 Hendra and Nipah Virus Attack (Hendra
Virus Disease and Nipah Virus
Encephalitis) 693
Kelly J. Corrigan
130 SARS-CoV Attack (Severe Acute
Respiratory Syndrome) 695
Suzanne M. Shepherd, Stephen 0. Cunnion, and
William H. Shoff
Section Ten (Part Three) • Toxins
131 Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B Attack 698
Robert G. Darling
132 Clostridium botulinum Toxin
(Botulism) Attack 701
GaryM. Vilke
133 Clostridium perfringens Toxin
(Epsilon Toxin) Attack 705
Lynne Barkley Burnett
134 Marine Toxin Attack 710
Wende R. Reenstra
135 T-2 Toxin (Trichothecene Mycotoxins)
Attack 714
Frederick Fung
136 Ricin Toxin from Ricinus communis
(Castor Beans) Attack 718
Angela C. Anderson
137 Aflatoxin Attack (Aspergillus Species) 722
Frederick Fung
* Section Ten (Part Four) • Other Biologic Agents
138 Coccidioides immitis Attack 725
(Coccidioidomycosis)
1 James F. Martin and Jill A. Grant
139 Histoplosma capsulatum Attack 729
(Histoplamosis)
Carol L. Venable and Elizabeth L. Mitchell
140 Cryptosporidium parvum Attack 733
(Cryptosporidiosis)
Miriam John and Carol Sulis
Section Eleven • Events Resulting in Blast Injuries
141 Introduction of Explosions and Blasts 736
Michael I. Greenberg and Dziwe W. Ntaba
142 Explosions: Conventional 745
Robert Partridge
143 Explosions: Fireworks 749
Craig Sisson
144 Suicide Bomber 754
JeffryL Kashuk and Shamai A. Grossman
145 Vehicle-Borne Improvised Explosive
Devices 757
Michael I. Greenberg, Michael Horowitz, and
Rachel Haroz
146 Rocket-Propelled Grenade Attack 761
Marshall Eidenberg
147 Conventional Explosions at a Mass Gathering 764
Franklin D. Friedman
148 Conventional Explosion at a Hospital 767
Donald MacMillan
149 Conventional Explosion in a
High-Rise Building 770
Ryan Friedberg
150 Conventional Explosion at a
Nuclear Power Plant 774
Michelle McMahon-Downer
151 Tunnel Explosion 778
Patrick Zelley
152 Liquefied Natural Gas Explosion 781
Michael I. Greenberg
153 Liquefied Natural Gas Tanker Truck Explosion 784
Jonathan M. Rubin
154 Petroleum Distillation/Processing Facility
Explosion 786
David C. Lee and Henry C. Chang
Section Twelve • Events Resulting in Burn Injuries
155 Introduction to Fires and Burns 790
Marianne E. Cinatand Victoria M. Vanderkam
156 Structure Fire 796
Deborah Gutman
157 Wilderness/Forest Fire 800
John Moloney
158 1 innel Fire 803
Daniel L Lemkin and Wade Gaasch
Section Thirteen • Events Resulting in
Ballistics Injuries
159 Gunshot Attack: Mass Casualties 807
Leon D. Sanchez and Jason Imperato
160 Sniper Attack 810
Jennifer £ DeLaPena and Leon D. Sanchez
161 Grenade and Pipe Bomb Injuries 813
Charles Stewart
Section Fourteen • Events Associated with
Structural Collapse/Crashing/Crushing
162 Introduction to Structural
Collapse (Crush Injury and
Crush Syndrome) 817
Pier Luigi Ingrassia, Alessandro Geddo,
Franceses Lombardi, and Francesco Delia Corte
163 Train Derailment 820
J. Scott Goudie
164 Subway Derailment 823
Jason Dylik and David Marcozzi
165 Bus Accident 826
Kavita Babu
166 Aircraft Crash Preparedness and Response 829
Dan Hanfling and Christopher R. Lang
167 Air Show Disaster 834
Peter D. Panagos
168 Asteroid, Meteoroid, and Spacecraft
Reentry Accidents 838
Jay Lemery and Faith Vilas
169 Building Collapse 842
Catherine Y. Lee and Timothy Davis
170 Bridge Collapse 846
Laura Diane Melville and Najma Rahman-Kahn
171 Human Stampede 850
Angela M. Mills and C. Crawford Mechem
172 Mining Accident 853
Dale M. Mole
173 Submarine or Surface Vessel Accident 857
Steven T. Cobery and Dale M. Mol6
Section Fifteen • Other Events, Combination
Events
174 Aircraft Hijacking 860
KurtR. Horst
175 Aircraft Crash into a High-Rise Building 864
Kurt R. Horst
176 Airliner Crash into a Nuclear Power Plant 869
Rick 6. Kulkarm
177 Dirty Bomb (Radiologic Dispersal Device) 872
George A. Alexander
178 Explosion at a Nuclear Waste Storage Facility 875
Constance 6. Nichols
179 Maritime Disasters 878
Lucille Gans
180 Cruise Ship Infectious Disease Outbreak 882
Scott G. Weiner
181 Hostage Taking 885
Dale M. Mole
182 Civil Unrest and Rioting 889
Denis J. FitzGerald
183 Massive Power System Failures 895
M. Kathleen Stewart and Charles Stewart
184 Hospital Power Outage 897
Marc C. Restuccia
185 Intentional Contamination of
Water Supplies 901
Patricia L Meinhardt
186 Food Supply Contamination 908
Marc C. Restuccia
187 Mass Gatherings 912
Katharyn £ Kennedy
188 Ecological Terrorism 918
George A. Alexander
189 Computer and Electronic
Terrorism and EMS 921
M. Kathleen Stewart and Charles Stewart
190 VIP Care 926
Lynne Berkley Burnett
|
adam_txt |
CONTENTS
PART I • Overview of Disaster Management
1 Introduction to Disaster Medicine 3
Gregory R. Ciottone
Section One • Introduction
2 Public Health and Disasters 7
Catherine Y. Lee and James Michael Riley
3 The Role of Emergency Medical Services
(EMS) in Disaster 20
Robert D. Furberg and David £ Marcozzi
4 Role of Emergency Medicine in Disaster 26
Management
Andrew I. Bern
5 The Role of Hospitals in Disaster 34
Mary W. Chaffee and Neill S. Oster
6 Complex Emergencies 43
Frederick M. Burkle, Jr. and P. Gregg Greenough
7 Children and Disaster 51
Bruce M. Becker
8 Psychological Impact of Disaster 59
Tracy £ Wimbush and Christo C. Courban
9 Ethical Issues in the Provision of Emergency
Medical Care in Multiple Casualty Incidents
and Disasters 63
Pinchas Halpern and Gregory L Larkin
10 Liability Issues in Emergency Response 71
Abigail Williams
Section Two • Governmental Resources
11 Disaster Response in the United States 79
Jerry L Mothershead
12 Local Disaster Response 84
Jerry L Mothershead
13 Disaster Planning: State Programs and
Response 90
Esther H. Chen, Bruce Y. Lee, and Jerry L. Mothershead
14 Selected Federal Disaster Response Agencies
and Capabilities 95
Jerry L Mothershead, Kevin Yeskey, and Peter Brewster
15 International Disaster Response 102
Dan Hanfling, Craig H. Llewellyn, and Frederick M. Burkle, Jr.
16 Disaster/Emergency Management Programs 108
Peter Brewster
Section Three • Pre-Event Topics
17 Community Hazard Vulnerability Assessment 112
James C. Chang
18 Health Care Facility Hazard and Vulnerability
Analysis 117
James C. Chang, William Gluckman, and Eric S. Weinstein
19 Public Information Management 124
Sharon Dilling, William Gluckman, Marc
S. Rosenthal, and Eric S. Weinstein
20 Informatics and Telecommunications in
Disaster 130
Churton Budd
21 Disaster Mitigation 139
Robert M. Gougelet
22 Vaccines 145
Kent J. Stock
23 Occupational Medicine: An Asset in
Time of Crisis 152
Tee L Guidotti
24 Worker Health and Safety in
Disaster Response 157
Clifford S. Mitchell, Brian J. Maguire, and Tee L Guidotti
25 Disaster Preparedness 164
Mark E. Keim and Paul Giannone
26 Policy Issues in Disaster Preparedness and
Response 174
Eric S. Weinstein
27 Mutual Aid 182
James Geiling and Kerry Fosher
28 Surge Capacity 193
Julie Ann P. Casani and Albert J. Romanosky
Section Four (Part One} • Event Response
Topics
29 Operations and Logistics 203
David Jaslow
30 The Incident Command System 208
Nicholas Sutingco
31 Scene Safety in Disaster Response 215
Robert L Freitas
32 Needs Assessment 224
Shan W. Liu
xxvii
33 Disaster Communications 229
Khama D. Ennis-Holcombe
34 Media Relations 232
Daniel F. Noltkamper
35 Managing Volunteers and Donations 238
Andrew M. Milsten
36 Personal Protective Equipment 246
John L Hick and Craig D. Thorne
37 Surveillance 255
P. Gregg Greenough and Frederick M. Burkle, Jr.
38 Management of Mass Fatalities 260
Nelson Tang and Chayan Dey
Section Four (Part Two) • Medical Operations
in Disasters
39 Disaster Management of Animals 264
James M. Burke
40 Urban Search and Rescue 269
Gregory R. Ciottone
41 Medical Care in Remote Areas 274
Thomas P. LeBosquet III and David £ Marcozzi
42 EMS Beyond the Barricade 278
Louis N. Molino, Sr.
43 Triage 283
Andrew Reisner
44 Patient Tracking Systems in Disasters 291
Charles Stewart
45 Tactical EMS 297
Jeffery C. Metzger and David £ Marcozzi
46 Infectious Disease in a Disaster Zone 302
Richard A. Tempel and David £ Marcozzi
47 Pharmaceuticals and Medical
Equipment in Disasters 308
Nicki Pesik and Susan £ Gorman
Section Five • Post-Event Topics
48 Displaced Populations 313
John D. Cahill
49 Rehabilitation and Reconstruction 317
Elizabeth Temin
50 Disaster Education and Research 322
Kenneth A. Williams, Leo Kobayashi, and Marc J. Shapiro
i
51 Practical Applications of Disaster
Epidemiology 327 •
P. Gregg Greenough and Frederick M. Burkle, Jr.
52 Measures of Effectiveness in
Disaster Management 333
Frederick M. Burkle, Jr. and P. Gregg Greenough
Section Six* Topics Unique to Terrorist Events
53 Lessons Learned as a Result of
Terrorist Attacks 335
Mark £ Keim
xxviii CONTENTS
54 The Psychology of Terrorism 347
Robert A. Ciottone
55 Medical Intelligence 354
Mark £ Keim
56 Thinking Outside the Box: Health Service 363
Support Considerations in the Era of
Asymmetrical Threats
Pietro D. Marghella and Duane C. Caneva
57 Accidental versus Intentional Event 369
Joanne Cono
58 Multimodality, Layered Attack 374
Nicholas Vincent Cagliuso
59 Operations Security, Site Security, and Incident
Response 382
Paul M. Maniscalco, Paul D. Kim, and Stephen F. Hood
60 Integration of Law Enforcement and Military
Resources with the Emergency Response to a
Terrorist Incident 391
Eric Sergienko
61 Nuclear Disaster Management 399
George A. Alexander
62 Chemical Attack 406
Duane C. Caneva
63 Biologic Attack 415
Andrew W. Artenstein
64 Future Biologic and Chemical Weapons 424
James M. Madsen and Robert G. Darling
65 Improvised Explosive Devices 434
Edward B. Lucci
66 Directed-Energy Weapons 441
M. Kathleen Stewart and Charles Stewart
67 Emergency Department Design 445
Robert H. Woolard
68 Chemical, Biologic, and Nuclear Quarantine 451
Patricia A. Nolan
69 Chemical Decontamination* 459
Barbara Vogt and John Sorensen
70 Radiation Decontamination 465
George A. Alexander
Part II • Management of Specific Event Types
Section Seven • Natural Disasters
71 Introduction to Natural Disasters 473
Debra D. Schnelle
72 Hurricanes, Cyclones, and Typhoons 475
Eric Sergienko
73 Earthquake 479
Bruce M. Becker
74 Tornado 484
Michael D. Jones and James Pfaff
75 Flood 489
Sylvia H. Kim
76 Tsunami 492
Prasanthi Ramanujam and Thea James
77 Heatwave 496
Alison Sisitsky
78 Winter Storm 499
Alison Sisitsky
79 Volcanic Eruption 502
Gregory Jay
80 Famine 506
Laura Macnow and Hilarie Cranmer
81 Landslides 509
Mark £ Keim
82 Avalanche 514
Jason A. Tracy
Section Eight: Nuclear/Radiation Events
83 Introduction to Nuclear/Radiologic Disasters 517
Dale M. Mole
84 Ionizing Radiation Incident 524
Carrie Barton
85 Nuclear Detonation 528
William £ Dickerson
86 Radiation Accident—IsolatedExposure 532
Jeanette A. Under and Lawrence S. Under
87 Radiation Accident—Dispersed Exposure 538
Jeanette A. Under and Lawrence S. Under
88 Nuclear Power Plant Meltdown 544
William Porcaro
Section Nine • Chemical Events
89 Introduction to Chemical Disasters 548
David Marcozzi
90 Industrial Chemical Disasters 556
Mark £ Keim
91 Nerve Agent Attack 563
David Davis and David Marcozzi
92 Vesicant Agent Attack 569
Lara K. Kulchycki
93 Respiratory Agent Attack (Toxic Inhalational
Injury) 573
Stephen J. Traub
94 Cyanide Attack 576
Mark £ Keim
95 Antimuscarinic Agent Attack 582
Fermin Barrueto, Jr., and Lewis S. Nelson
96 LSD, Other Indoles, and Phenylethylamine
Derivative Attack 585
Fiona £ Gallahue
97 Opioid Agent Attack 589
Rick G. Kulkarni
98 Riot-Control Agent Attack 593
Sam Shen
99 Nicotinic Agent Attack 596
Sage W. Wiener and Lewis S. Nelson
100 Anesthetic-Agent Attack 600
Kinjal N. Sethuraman and K. Sophia Dyer
Section Ten • Biologic Events
101 Introduction to Biologic Agents 605
Andrew S. Nugent and Eric W. Dickson
Section Ten (Part 0ne)» Bacterial Agents
102 Bacillus Anthmcts (Anthrax) Attack 608
Christo C. Courban
103 Yersinia Pestis (Plague) Attack 613
Jeremiah D. Schuur and Jonathan Harris Valente
104 Francisella Tularensis (Tularemia) Attack 617
Irving Jacoby
105 Brucella Species (Brucellosis) Attack 621
TeriggiJ. Ciccone
106 Coxiella burnetii (Q Fever) Attack 624
TeriggiJ. Ciccone
107 Rickettsia prowazekii Attack (Typhus Fever) 627
Vtttorio J. Ratio and Jonathan A. Edlow
108 Orientia tsutsugamushi (Scrub Typhus) 629
Attack
Peter B. Smulowitz and Jonathan A. Edlow
109 Rickettsia rickettsii (Rocky Mountain
Spotted Fever) Attack 632
Vittorio J. Ratio and Jonathan A. Edlow
110 Vibrio cholerae (Cholera) Attack 635
Milana Boukhman
111 Shigella dysenteriae {ShigeUosis) Attack 638
Suzanne M. Shepherd, Stephen 0. Cunnion, and
William H. Shoff
112 Salmonella Species (Salmonellosis) Attack 641
Sumeru Mehta and C. Crawford Mechem
113 Salmonella typhi (Typhoid Fever) Attack 644
Lawrence Proano
114 Burkholderia mallei (Glanders) Attack 647
Mark A. Graber
115 Burkholderia pseudomallei
(Melioidosis) Attack 650
Sean Montgomery
116 Chlamydia psittad (Psittacosis) Attack 653
Wans R. House
117 Escherichia coli O157:H7 (Hemorrhagic
E. Colt) Attack 657
Roy Karl Werner
Section Ten (Part Two) • Viral Agents
118 Viral Encephalitides (Alphaviruses) Attack 661
Matthew Berkman and Kelly J. Corrigan
CONTENTS xxix
119 Tick-Borne Encephalitis Virus Attack 661
Vittorio J. Raho
120 Viral Hemorrhagic Fever Virus Attack—
Arenaviruses 665
Sandra S. Yoon
121 Viral Hemorrhagic Fever
Attack—Bunya Virus 668
Sean Michael Siler
122 Viral Hemorrhagic Fever
Attack—Filo Viruses 671
William Porcaro
123 Viral Hemorrhagic Fever
Attack—Flaviviruses 674
John D. Cahill and James McKinnell
124 Chikungunya Virus Attack 678
Heather Long
125 Variola Major Virus (Smallpox) Attack 681
Robert G. Darling
126 Influenza Virus Attack 684
Anna I. Cheh
127 Monkeypox Attack 687
John D. Malone
128 Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome Attack 690
Bonnie H. Hartstein and Curtis J. Hunter
129 Hendra and Nipah Virus Attack (Hendra
Virus Disease and Nipah Virus
Encephalitis) 693
Kelly J. Corrigan
130 SARS-CoV Attack (Severe Acute
Respiratory Syndrome) 695
Suzanne M. Shepherd, Stephen 0. Cunnion, and
William H. Shoff
Section Ten (Part Three) • Toxins
131 Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B Attack 698
Robert G. Darling
132 Clostridium botulinum Toxin
(Botulism) Attack 701
GaryM. Vilke
133 Clostridium perfringens Toxin
(Epsilon Toxin) Attack 705
Lynne Barkley Burnett
134 Marine Toxin Attack 710
Wende R. Reenstra
135 T-2 Toxin (Trichothecene Mycotoxins)
Attack 714
Frederick Fung
136 Ricin Toxin from Ricinus communis
(Castor Beans) Attack 718
Angela C. Anderson
137 Aflatoxin Attack (Aspergillus Species) 722
Frederick Fung
* Section Ten (Part Four) • Other Biologic Agents
138 Coccidioides immitis Attack 725
(Coccidioidomycosis)
1 James F. Martin and Jill A. Grant
139 Histoplosma capsulatum Attack 729
(Histoplamosis)
Carol L. Venable and Elizabeth L. Mitchell
140 Cryptosporidium parvum Attack 733
(Cryptosporidiosis)
Miriam John and Carol Sulis
Section Eleven • Events Resulting in Blast Injuries
141 Introduction of Explosions and Blasts 736
Michael I. Greenberg and Dziwe W. Ntaba
142 Explosions: Conventional 745
Robert Partridge
143 Explosions: Fireworks 749
Craig Sisson
144 Suicide Bomber 754
JeffryL Kashuk and Shamai A. Grossman
145 Vehicle-Borne Improvised Explosive
Devices 757
Michael I. Greenberg, Michael Horowitz, and
Rachel Haroz
146 Rocket-Propelled Grenade Attack 761
Marshall Eidenberg
147 Conventional Explosions at a Mass Gathering 764
Franklin D. Friedman
148 Conventional Explosion at a Hospital 767
Donald MacMillan
149 Conventional Explosion in a
High-Rise Building 770
Ryan Friedberg
150 Conventional Explosion at a
Nuclear Power Plant 774
Michelle McMahon-Downer
151 Tunnel Explosion 778
Patrick Zelley
152 Liquefied Natural Gas Explosion 781
Michael I. Greenberg
153 Liquefied Natural Gas Tanker Truck Explosion 784
Jonathan M. Rubin
154 Petroleum Distillation/Processing Facility
Explosion 786
David C. Lee and Henry C. Chang
Section Twelve • Events Resulting in Burn Injuries
155 Introduction to Fires and Burns 790
Marianne E. Cinatand Victoria M. Vanderkam
156 Structure Fire 796
Deborah Gutman
157 Wilderness/Forest Fire 800
John Moloney
158 1\innel Fire 803
Daniel L Lemkin and Wade Gaasch
Section Thirteen • Events Resulting in
Ballistics Injuries
159 Gunshot Attack: Mass Casualties 807
Leon D. Sanchez and Jason Imperato
160 Sniper Attack 810
Jennifer £ DeLaPena and Leon D. Sanchez
161 Grenade and Pipe Bomb Injuries 813
Charles Stewart
Section Fourteen • Events Associated with
Structural Collapse/Crashing/Crushing
162 Introduction to Structural
Collapse (Crush Injury and
Crush Syndrome) 817
Pier Luigi Ingrassia, Alessandro Geddo,
Franceses Lombardi, and Francesco Delia Corte
163 Train Derailment 820
J. Scott Goudie
164 Subway Derailment 823
Jason Dylik and David Marcozzi
165 Bus Accident 826
Kavita Babu
166 Aircraft Crash Preparedness and Response 829
Dan Hanfling and Christopher R. Lang
167 Air Show Disaster 834
Peter D. Panagos
168 Asteroid, Meteoroid, and Spacecraft
Reentry Accidents 838
Jay Lemery and Faith Vilas
169 Building Collapse 842
Catherine Y. Lee and Timothy Davis
170 Bridge Collapse 846
Laura Diane Melville and Najma Rahman-Kahn
171 Human Stampede 850
Angela M. Mills and C. Crawford Mechem
172 Mining Accident 853
Dale M. Mole
173 Submarine or Surface Vessel Accident 857
Steven T. Cobery and Dale M. Mol6
Section Fifteen • Other Events, Combination
Events
174 Aircraft Hijacking 860
KurtR. Horst
175 Aircraft Crash into a High-Rise Building 864
Kurt R. Horst
176 Airliner Crash into a Nuclear Power Plant 869
Rick 6. Kulkarm
177 Dirty Bomb (Radiologic Dispersal Device) 872
George A. Alexander
178 Explosion at a Nuclear Waste Storage Facility 875
Constance 6. Nichols
179 Maritime Disasters 878
Lucille Gans
180 Cruise Ship Infectious Disease Outbreak 882
Scott G. Weiner
181 Hostage Taking 885
Dale M. Mole
182 Civil Unrest and Rioting 889
Denis J. FitzGerald
183 Massive Power System Failures 895
M. Kathleen Stewart and Charles Stewart
184 Hospital Power Outage 897
Marc C. Restuccia
185 Intentional Contamination of
Water Supplies 901
Patricia L Meinhardt
186 Food Supply Contamination 908
Marc C. Restuccia
187 Mass Gatherings 912
Katharyn £ Kennedy
188 Ecological Terrorism 918
George A. Alexander
189 Computer and Electronic
Terrorism and EMS 921
M. Kathleen Stewart and Charles Stewart
190 VIP Care 926
Lynne Berkley Burnett |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV023278448 |
callnumber-first | R - Medicine |
callnumber-label | RC86 |
callnumber-raw | RC86.7 |
callnumber-search | RC86.7 |
callnumber-sort | RC 286.7 |
callnumber-subject | RC - Internal Medicine |
classification_rvk | XE 5600 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)59003652 (DE-599)BVBBV023278448 |
dewey-full | 362.18 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 362 - Social problems and services to groups |
dewey-raw | 362.18 |
dewey-search | 362.18 |
dewey-sort | 3362.18 |
dewey-tens | 360 - Social problems and services; associations |
discipline | Soziologie Medizin |
discipline_str_mv | Soziologie Medizin |
edition | 3. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV023278448 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T20:38:46Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:14:48Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0323032532 9780323032537 |
language | English |
lccn | 2005047926 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016463293 |
oclc_num | 59003652 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 |
owner_facet | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 |
physical | XXXI, 952 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2006 |
publishDateSearch | 2006 |
publishDateSort | 2006 |
publisher | Elsevier, Mosby |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Disaster medicine Gregory R. Ciottone [ed.-in-chief] 3. ed. Philadelphia, Pa. Elsevier, Mosby 2006 XXXI, 952 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index "This brand-new reference offers comprehensive yet succinct guidance on the preparation, assessment, and management of a full range of disasters, both natural and man-made (including the threat of terrorist attack and the use of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapon systems.) Dr. Ciottone - recognized worldwide as an authority in the field - presents a full range of coverage from the basics of disaster medicine to more advanced concepts, such as tactical EMS, hazard vulnerability analysis, impact of disaster on children, and more." "Part 1 of the book gives you an "A-Z" source for information on every aspect of disaster medicine and management. Part 2 features an exhaustive compilation of every conceivable disaster event, organized to facilitate fast reference in a real-time setting. Part 2 also serves as your quick consult on disaster medicine. "This new volume includes Individual Concepts and Events sections that provide information on the general approach to disaster medicine and practical information on specific disasters. You'll also find an exhaustive list of chapters on the conceivable chemical and biologic weapons known today, as well as strategies for the management of future events, or possible scenarios, for which there is no precedent."--BOOK JACKET Disaster medicine Disaster Planning methods Accidents, Radiation prevention & control Bioterrorism prevention & control Emergency Medical Services methods Natural Disasters Katastrophenmedizin (DE-588)4114155-6 gnd rswk-swf Katastrophenmedizin (DE-588)4114155-6 s DE-604 Ciottone, Gregory R. Sonstige oth HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016463293&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Disaster medicine Disaster medicine Disaster Planning methods Accidents, Radiation prevention & control Bioterrorism prevention & control Emergency Medical Services methods Natural Disasters Katastrophenmedizin (DE-588)4114155-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4114155-6 |
title | Disaster medicine |
title_auth | Disaster medicine |
title_exact_search | Disaster medicine |
title_exact_search_txtP | Disaster medicine |
title_full | Disaster medicine Gregory R. Ciottone [ed.-in-chief] |
title_fullStr | Disaster medicine Gregory R. Ciottone [ed.-in-chief] |
title_full_unstemmed | Disaster medicine Gregory R. Ciottone [ed.-in-chief] |
title_short | Disaster medicine |
title_sort | disaster medicine |
topic | Disaster medicine Disaster Planning methods Accidents, Radiation prevention & control Bioterrorism prevention & control Emergency Medical Services methods Natural Disasters Katastrophenmedizin (DE-588)4114155-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Disaster medicine Disaster Planning methods Accidents, Radiation prevention & control Bioterrorism prevention & control Emergency Medical Services methods Natural Disasters Katastrophenmedizin |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016463293&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT ciottonegregoryr disastermedicine |