1. What is Disaster Management System?
a) The United Nations defines a disaster
as a serious disruption of the functioning of a community or a society.
b) Disasters involve widespread human,
material, economic or environmental impacts, which exceed the ability of the
affected community or society to cope using its own resources.
c) The Red Cross and Red Crescent
societies define disaster management as the organisation and management of
resources and responsibilities for dealing with all humanitarian aspects of
emergencies, in particular preparedness, response and recovery in order to
lessen the impact of disasters.
2. Types of disasters: There is no country that is immune from
disaster, though vulnerability to disaster varies. There are four main
types of disaster.
a) Natural disasters: including floods, hurricanes, earthquakes and volcano eruptions that
have immediate impacts on human health and secondary impacts causing further
death and suffering from (for example) floods, landslides, fires, tsunamis.
b) Environmental emergencies: including technological or industrial accidents, usually
involving the production, use or transportation of hazardous material, and
occur where these materials are produced, used or transported, and forest fires
caused by humans.
c) Complex emergencies: involving a break-down of authority, looting and attacks on strategic
installations, including conflict situations and war.
d) Pandemic emergencies: involving a sudden onset of contagious disease that affects health,
disrupts services and businesses, and brings economic and social costs.
3. Any disaster can interrupt essential services,
such as health care, electricity, water, sewage/garbage removal, transportation
and communications. The interruption can seriously affect the health, social
and economic networks of local communities and countries.
4. Disasters have a major and
long-lasting impact on people long after the immediate effect has been
mitigated.
5. Poorly planned relief activities can
have a significant negative impact not only on the disaster victims but also on
donors and relief agencies.
6. So it is important that physical
therapists join established programmes rather than attempting individual
efforts.
7. Local, regional, national and
international organisations are all involved in mounting a humanitarian
response to disasters.
8. Each will have a prepared disaster
management plan. These plans cover prevention, preparedness, relief and
recovery.
9. Disaster prevention:
a) These are activities designed to
provide permanent protection from disasters. Not all disasters, particularly
natural disasters, can be prevented, but the risk of loss of life and injury
can be mitigated with good evacuation plans, environmental planning and design
standards.
b) In January 2005, 168 Governments adopted a
10-year global plan for natural disaster risk reduction called the Hyogo
Framework. It offers guiding principles, priorities for action, and practical
means for achieving disaster resilience for vulnerable communities.
10. Disaster preparedness:
a)
These activities are designed to minimise loss of life and damage – for
example by removing people and property from a threatened location and by
facilitating timely and effective rescue, relief and rehabilitation.
b)
Preparedness is the main way of reducing the impact of disasters.
Community-based preparedness and management should be a high priority in
physical therapy practice management.
11. Disaster relief:
a) This is a coordinated multi-agency
response to reduce the impact of a disaster and its long-term results. Relief
activities include rescue, relocation, providing food and water, preventing
disease and disability, repairing vital services such as telecommunications and
transport, providing temporary shelter and emergency health care.
b) Disaster recovery: Once emergency
needs have been met and the initial crisis is over, the people affected and the
communities that support them are still vulnerable.
c) Recovery activities include
rebuilding infrastructure, health care and rehabilitation.
d) These should blend with development
activities, such as building human resources for health and developing policies
and practices to avoid similar situations in future.
e) Disaster management is linked with
sustainable development, particularly in relation to vulnerable people such as
those with disabilities, elderly people, children and other marginalised
groups.
f) Health Volunteers Overseas
publications address some of the common misunderstandings about disaster
management.
#Shared by: MKR#
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