Disaster Lecture Prelim Finals
Disaster Lecture Prelim Finals
Disaster Lecture Prelim Finals
ESSENTIALS OF
The WHO defined natural disasters as
the “result of an ecological disruption
or threat that exceeds the adjustment
DISASTER PLANNING capacity of the affected community”
Cold waves
Hydrological • Specifically, as used by the US
Is a violent, sudden and destructive National Weather Service, a
change either in the quality of Earth’s cold wave is a rapid fall in
water or in the distribution or temperature within a 24-hour
movement of water on land below period, requiring substantially
the surface or in the atmosphere. increased protection to
agriculture, industry,
Flood
commerce and social activities
• An overflow of water that
‘submerges’ on land
• A flood is not considered
significant unless the water
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Drought
Biological Disasters
• is the unusual dryness of soil
caused by levels of rainfall Are natural scenarios involving
significantly below average disease, disability or death on a large
over a prolonged period. scale among humans, animals and
• Hot and dry winds, shortage of plants due to microorganisms like
water, high temperatures and bacteria, or viruses or toxins
consequent evaporation of
moisture from the ground can Disasters are frequently categorized
also contribute to conditions of based on their onset, impact, and
drought. Drought result in crop duration.
failure and shortage of water.
Earthquakes and tornadoes – rapid-
Thunderstorms onset events
Tornado Terms
THE DISASTER
• Prevention - refers to a broad
range of activities, such as
attempts to prevent a disaster
CONTINUUM from occurring, and any
actions taken to prevent
Disaster Continuum - also referred to further disease, disability, or loss
as the life cycle/emergency of
management cycle of a disaster. • Response phase - is the actual
implementation of the disaster
plan.
3 phases: preimpact (before), impact o Disaster response, or
(during), and postimpact (after) emergency
• The basic phases of a disaster management, is the
management program include organization of activities
preparedness, mitigation, used to address the
response, recovery, and event
evaluation. o focuses primarily on
emergency relief: saving
Degree of overlaps present across lives, providing first aid,
phases, but each phase has distinct minimizing and restoring
activities associated with damaged systems such
• Preparedness - refers to the as communications and
proactive planning efforts transportation, and
designed to structure the providing care and
disaster response prior to its basic life requirements to
occurrence. victims
o encompasses • Recovery-actions focus on
evaluating potential stabilizing and returning the
vulnerabilities community to normal.
(assessment of risk) and o This can range from
the propensity for a rebuilding damaged
disaster to occur. buildings and repairing
• Warning - refers to monitoring infrastructure to
events to look for indicators relocating populations
that predict the location, and instituting physical,
timing, and magnitude of behavioral, and mental
future disasters. health interventions.
• Mitigation includes measures o "Build Back Better"
taken to reduce the harmful should be the goal of all
effects of a disaster by recovery action to
attempting to limit its impact produce resilient and
on human health, community sustainable communities
function, and economic o Evaluation - After a
infrastructure. disaster, it is essential that
evaluations be
conducted to determine
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4th STEP
• Provide continuous
compressions at a rate of 100 to
120 per minute
• Regardless of age, provide
single breath every 6 seconds,
or 10 times per minute
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DISASTER TRIAGE
• Incident triage - occurs when
the ED is stressed by a large
number of patients due to an
"Triage is a process which places the
acute incident or an ongoing
right patient in the right place at the
medical crisis such as
right time to receive the right level of
pandemic influenza but is still
care"
able to provide care to all
Accurate triage provides responders patients utilizing existing
with the opportunity to do the agency resources. Same
greatest good for the greatest tagging as the daily triage
number of casualties (with the least
amount of harm), and is the • Disaster triage is a general term
cornerstone of good disaster medical employed when local EMS and
resource management hospital emergency services
are overwhelmed to the point
• used to decide who will get the
that immediate care cannot
resources that are available
be provided to everyone who
and who will not.
needs it because sufficient
• may have a significant impact
resources are not immediately
not only on the individual
available.
victims but also on the health
• Resource management
outcomes of the entire affected
becomes the driving force for
population
the provision of care.
• Its overall success may be
highly dependent on the Categories:
competence, experience, and
Minimal or minor, Green -
composure of the nurse,
physiologically well compensated
working in close concert with
and likely to remain so for an
the rest of the emergency care
extended period of time. AKA
team
Walking wounded
Subtle Differences:
• (e.g. minor lacerations, burns,
• Daily triage is performed by or other soft tissue or
nurses on a routine basis in the orthopedic injuries without
ED, often utilizing a significant bleeding or
standardized approach, neurovascular compromise
augmented by clinical and pts with mild to moderate
judgment. The highest intensity psychological stress reactions.)
of care is provided to the most
Delayed, yellow - compensated
seriously ill or injured patients,
physiology but a significant potential
even if those patients have a
for deterioration or morbidity if there
low probability of survival.
are long delays before definitive care
can be provided.
PHASES OF DISASTER
that can be temporarily but
effectively treated on-scene
and identify those whose
TRIAGE: immediate needs can be met
only in a hospital setting
From the Field to the Hospital • effective use of ground and air
• Prehospital care providers are transport resources often
trained and well-practiced in requires that several patients
triaging individual injured or ill be placed in each transport
patients to appropriate unit. (different triage category
hospitals based on their needs in one plane to be sent for the
for specialized care. same facility)
• Field disaster triage protocols, Tertiary triage
aimed at maximizing the
outcome for the greatest • hospital personnel determine if
possible number of victims are the facility can provide
usually utilized only for the initial appropriate care or if the
gross sorting of patients in the patient will require stabilization
field. - "primary triage" and transfer to a facility
• The goal of primary triage is sort capable of a higher level of
patients into five triage care.
categories: Immediate, Functional role in
Staff
Delayed, Minimal, Expectant, Triage
and Dead. Emergency Triage officer
physician
Primary Triage Evaluates patient
• Physiology is the focus rather and reports findings
Emergency
to offer, supervises
than the identification of nurse (1)
clerk, nursing aid,
specific injuries. and transporters
• Each time a provider assesses a Emergency Records all
patient is an opportunity to nurse (2) assessments
reevaluate their triage Applies
Nurse’s
prioritization. prenumbered
aide/clerk
identification band
Secondary Triage Moves patient from
triage area to
• may be performed on-scene if Transporter
assigned area in the
the transport is delayed for any ED
reason or at the hospital itself.
• additional information about
Staff Complement of a Typical
each patient is obtained
Disaster Triage Team
through a more thorough
physical assessment and • In some facilities, a senior level
history (obvious injuries are ED registered nurse may be
identified.) designated as the triage officer
• one of the goals is to determine • No "first come, first serve basis",
which patients have conditions especially for minor patients
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SALT Triage (sort, assess, life-saving likely to survive given the available
interventions, treatment and/or resources.
transport triage)
Expectant: those with difficulty
• Formulated by a CDC- breathing, uncontrolled hemorrhage,
sponsored expert panel absence of peripheral pulses, and/or
• It uses an all-hazards approach inability to follow commands; who are
that is intended to be used for unlikely to survive given the available
any age patient in any type of resources.
event
Delayed: those who are alert and
Steps follow commands, have palpable
peripheral pulses, no signs of
1. Global sorting 2 voice
respiratory distress, and all bleeding is
commands (walk and wave)
controlled, with injuries or an illness
2. Individual Assessment
that in the opinion of the rescuer is
3. Treatment or Transport
more than minor.
Dead: those who are not breathing
Minimal: those who are alert and
even after lifesaving interventions
follow commands, have palpable
have been attempted.
peripheral pulses, no signs of
Immediate: those with difficulty respiratory distress, and all bleeding is
breathing, uncontrolled hemorrhage, controlled, with injuries/conditions
absence of peripheral pulses, and/or that in the opinion of the rescuer are
inability to follow commands; who are minor
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Salt Triage (sort, assess, life – saving interventions, treatment and/or transport
triage)
LSI • Obeys
commands
• Control major or makes
hemorrhage purposeful
• Open airway movement?
(if child, • Has
consider 2 peripheral M
rescue → Breathing pulse? All
Minor I
breaths) ↓ Yes • Not in injuries →
N
→ → Yes
• Chest No respiratory Yes only? I
↓
decompression DEAD distress? M
• Auto injector • Major ↓ no A
antidotes hemorrhage L
Delayed
is
controlled?
↓ Any no
Likely to survive
given current Yes Immediate
resources →
↓ No
Expectant
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GENERAL
10. Make sure your home heating
sources are clean and in
working order. Never pour
PREPAREDNESS IN water on grease fires.
EMERGENCY MEDICAL
for, respond to, and recover
from the effect of all hazards.
• A mass casualty incident will
CONSEQUENCE, usually be declared by the first
arriving unit at the scene of the
PLANNING AND MASS incident
CASUALTY INCIDENT
Scene Assessment (METHANE
method)
Safety zones:
Section 20. Ban on Incineration. All projects which will involve the use
of atomic and/or nuclear energy,
- Incineration, hereby defined as the
and will entail release and emission of
burning of municipal, biomedical
radioactive substances into the
and hazardous waste, which process
environment, incident to the
emits poisonous and toxic fumes is
establishment or possession of
hereby prohibited;
nuclear energy facilities and
• Provided, however, that the radioactive materials, handling,
prohibition shall not apply to transport, production, storage, and
traditional small-scale method use of radioactive materials, shall be
of community/neighborhood regulated in the interest of public
sanitation "siga", traditional, health and welfare by the Philippine
agricultural, cultural, health, Nuclear Research Institute (PNRI), in
and food preparation and coordination with Department and
crematoria; other appropriate government
• Provided, Further, that existing agencies.
incinerators dealing with a
Tobacco Regulation Act of 2003.
biomedical waste shall be out
Republic Act No. 9211
within three (3) years after the
effectivity of this Act; Provided, AN ACT REGULATING THE
Finally, that in the interim, such PACKAGING, USE, SALE, DISTRIBUTION
units shall be limited to the AND ADVERTISEMENTS OF TOBACCO
burning of pathological and PRODUCTS AND FOR OTHER
infectious wastes, and subject PURPOSES
to close monitoring by the
Department. (DENR)
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SECTION 3. Purpose. It is the main within the same room that has been
thrust of this Act to: designated as a nonsmoking area.
GUIDELINES IN
The orange rainfall advisory is raised
in areas where rainfall is between
15 mm and 30 mm within one hour.
DISASTER AND Flooding is a definite threat in
communities under the orange alert.
EMERGENCY A red rainfall advisory is issued when
SITUATIONS
downpours constitute an
emergency. This is raised when
observed rainfall is more than 30 mm
PAGASA Rainfall Warning System
within one hour or if rainfall has
stands for Philippine Atmospheric, continued for the past three hours
Geophysical and Astronomical and is more than 65 mm.
Services Administration
When PAGASA raises a Red warning,
• national institution dedicated communities should be prepared to
to providing flood and typhoon respond. It means serious flooding is
warnings, public weather seen and that residents should be
forecasts and advisories, ready to evacuate to safety
meteorological, astronomical,
climatological, and other
specialized information and Tropical Cyclone warning icons
services primarily for the Wind signal: 1
protection of life and property
and in support of economic, Wind threat:
productivity, and sustainable • Strong winds
development. • Beaufort 6-7
• created on December 8, 1972, • 39-61 km/h
by virtue of Presidential Decree (22-33 kt. 10.8-17.1 m/s)
No. 78 reorganizing the
Philippine Weather Bureau into Warning Lead Time (hours before
PAGASA. onset of wind threat): 36 hours
and ripening stages, may suffer blow over, with twigs and
some damage. branches of frail trees broken.
• Minimal disruption to public Considerable damage is likely
transportation to rice and other similar crops.
especially those in flowering
and ripening stages
The Beaufort scale is a method of
Wind signal: 3
estimating wind speed based on the
general condition of the surface of a Wind threat:
large body of water with respect to
• storm – force winds
wind waves and swell. This scale
• Beaufort 10 -11
allows sailors to estimate the wind
• 89 – 117 km/h
speed just by observing the state of
(48-63 kt. 24.5-32.6 m/s)
the sea surface.
Warning Lead Time (hours before
Wind signal: 2
onset of wind threat): 18 hours
Wind threat:
Potential impacts
• Gale – force winds
• Makeshift or old, dilapidated
• Beaufort 8-9
structures, and other structures
• 52-88 km/h
made of light materials may
• (34-47 kt. 17.2 – 24.4 m/s)
suffer substantial damage.
Warning Lead Time (hours before Houses of poor or average
onset of wind threat): 24 hours construction will have
considerable roof damage,
Potential impacts
some blown. out windows,
• Minor to moderate damage and/or partial wall damage.
may occur to makeshift or old Well-constructed houses les.
dilapidated structures, and reinforced CHB/pre-cast
other structures made of light concrete, reinforced concrete
materials. Houses of poor and moment frame) may suffer
average construction (e.g. minimal to minor roof damage.
unreinforced CHB/masonry, • Warehouses and other building
moved timber-CHB) may in industrial parks may suffer
receive minor roof damage minor to moderate damage.
• Unsecured, exposed • Unsecured, exposed outdoor
lightweight items may become items of light to moderate
projectiles which may cause weight may become
additional damage. projectiles, causing additional
• Some electrical wires may be damage or injuries
blown down, resulting in local • Many areas may suffer power
power outages. outages with numerous
• Minor to moderate disruption downed power lines and posts.
to public transportation. Minimal to minor disruption in
• Most banana and similar plants telecommunications and
are titled, with some stooped or potable water supply
downed. Some small trees
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1 1-3 1-3 Light Air Ripples with the appearance of scales are formed, but without foam
crests.
2 4-7 4-6 Light Breeze Small wavelets, still short, but more pronounced. Crests have a glassy
appearance and do not break.
3 8-12 7-10 Gentle Large wavelets. Crests begin to break. Foam of glassy appearance.
Breeze Perhaps scattered white horses.
Leaves and small twigs in constant motion; wind extends light flag.
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4 13-18 11-16 Moderate Small waves, becoming larger; fairly frequent white horses.
Breeze
Raises dust and loose paper; small branches are moved.
5 19-24 17-21 Fresh Moderate waves, taking a more pronounced long form; many white
Breeze horses are formed.
6 25-31 22-27 Strong Large waves begin to form; the white foam crests are more extensive
Breeze everywhere.
7 32-38 28-33 Near Gale Sea heaps up and white foam from breaking waves begins to be blown
in streaks along the direction of the wind.
8 39-46 34-40 Gale Moderately high waves of greater length; edges of crests begin to break
into spindrift. The foam is blown in well-marked streaks along the
direction of the wind.
9 47-54 41-47 Severe Gale High waves. Dense streaks of foam along the direction of the wind.
Crests of waves begin to topple, tumble and roll over. Spray may affect
visibility
10 55-63 48-55 Storm Very high waves with long overhanging crests. The resulting foam, in
great patches, is blown in dense white streaks along the direction of the
wind. On the whole the surface of the sea takes on a white appearance.
The tumbling of the sea becomes heavy and shock-like. Visibility
affected.
11 64-72 56-63 Violent Exceptionally high waves (small and medium-size ships might be for a
Storm time lost to view behind the waves). The sea is completely covered with
long white patches of foam lying along the direction of the wind.
Everywhere the edges of the wave crests are blown into froth. Visibility
affected.
12 72-83 64-71 Hurricane The air is filled with foam and spray. Sea completely white with driving
spray; visibility very seriously affected.