Mass Disaster Management

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Mass Disaster Management - Defining the Chaos

  • Mass Casualty Incident (MCI): An event that results in (or has the potential to result in) more injured or deceased than can be managed by local resources.
    • Mass Fatality Incident (MFI): An event resulting in more decedents to be recovered and examined than can be managed in the local medical examiner/coroner's jurisdiction.
    • Triggers: Natural (e.g., earthquakes, tsunamis) or Man-made (e.g., industrial accidents, terrorist attacks).
    • Key Challenges: Resource scarcity, communication breakdown, overwhelming casualties.
  • Disaster Management Cycle:
    • Mitigation: Reducing risk impact.
    • Preparedness: Planning & training for response.
    • Response: Immediate actions post-impact (rescue, triage, treatment).
    • Recovery: Long-term restoration of normalcy.
  • Incident Command System (ICS): Standardized hierarchical structure for on-scene management with AI-driven coordination and digital communication tools for real-time data analysis and resource allocation.
    • Benefits: Clear chain of command, inter-agency coordination, efficient resource allocation.
    • 📌 C-FLOP for ICS major functions: Command, Finance/Admin, Logistics, Operations, Planning.

⭐ While the "Golden Hour" is recognized, modern disaster response emphasizes triage and resource allocation based on providing the greatest good for the greatest number, shifting from individual patient care to a population-based approach in resource-limited settings.

Mass Disaster Management - Managing the Mayhem

  • Goal: Coordinated, efficient, ethical response to minimize casualties & suffering.
  • Core Principles:
    • Incident Command System (ICS): Standardized on-site management; common terminology, modular organization, unified command.
    • Triage: Rapidly sort casualties by severity.
      • Multiple Systems Available: START (Simple Triage And Rapid Treatment) and SALT (Sort, Assess, Lifesaving Interventions, Treatment/Transport) are prominent systems.
      • START Protocol: Assesses walking, respirations, perfusion, mental status.
      • Categories: Red (Immediate), Yellow (Delayed), Green (Minor), Black (Deceased/Expectant).
      • 📌 RPM (Respirations >30/min? Perfusion: Cap Refill >2s? Mental Status: Can't follow commands?).
      • Choice of triage system depends on specific context and training.
    • Communication: Clear channels; inter-agency coordination.
    • Logistics: Resource management (personnel, supplies, transport).
    • Security: Scene safety, access control.
  • Specialized Areas:
    • Mortuary Affairs: Dignified handling, DVI.
    • Psychosocial Support: For victims, families, responders.
  • India: NDMA (National Disaster Management Authority), NDRF (National Disaster Response Force).

Fire Incident Command System Structure

⭐ The primary goal of triage in a mass casualty incident is to do the "greatest good for the greatest number" of survivors.

Mass Disaster Management - Identifying the Victims

Effective victim identification in mass disasters follows internationally recognized protocols, primarily INTERPOL DVI guidelines (2023 updated version), ensuring accuracy and dignity. A multidisciplinary team approach is essential.

  • Primary Identifiers (Highest Scientific Certainty):
    • Fingerprints (Dactyloscopy): Unique patterns, durable postmortem.
    • Dental Records (Forensic Odontology): Unique restorations, resistant to decomposition/fire.
    • DNA Analysis: Genetic fingerprinting; nuclear DNA preferred, mtDNA for degraded samples.
  • Secondary Identifiers (Corroborative, used in combination or when primary unavailable):
    • Physical Description: Age, sex, stature, ethnicity, hair/eye color.
    • Medical Information: Surgical scars, implants (with serial numbers), tattoos, old fractures.
    • Clothing & Personal Effects: Jewelry, ID cards, items found with the body.

DVI Phases & Data Flow:

  • Key Principles:
    • Presumption of identity until proven.
    • Chain of custody for all remains and data.
    • Regular team briefings and information sharing.
    • 📌 D.V.I. = Disaster Victim Identification.

⭐ INTERPOL DVI guidelines (2023) require 100% match between ante-mortem and post-mortem data using DNA, odontological data, and/or fingerprints for positive identification, with all other information supporting the identification.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Triage (e.g., START/SAVE) is crucial for prioritizing victims in MCIs.
  • Key DVI phases: Scene (Recovery), Postmortem, Antemortem, Reconciliation, Debriefing.
  • Primary identifiers (Fingerprints, Dental records, DNA) are definitive for identification.
  • INTERPOL DVI forms (Pink PM, Yellow AM) standardize data collection.
  • Incident Command System (ICS) ensures coordinated multi-agency disaster response.
  • Psychological support for victims, families, and responders is a core component.
  • Strict chain of custody for human remains and property is mandatory.

Practice Questions: Mass Disaster Management

Test your understanding with these related questions

In an accident case, after the arrival of medical team, all should be done in early management except;

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Flashcards: Mass Disaster Management

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Victims of accident and suicide who are found dead at the scene and resuscitation is deemed pointless are classified under Category _____ of Modified Maastricht classification

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Victims of accident and suicide who are found dead at the scene and resuscitation is deemed pointless are classified under Category _____ of Modified Maastricht classification

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