Title: Alert Based Disaster Notification and Resource Allocation
1Alert Based Disaster Notification and Resource
Allocation
- Dickson K.W. Chiu
- Senior Member, IEEE
- kwchiu_at_acm.org, dicksonchiu_at_ieee.org
- Drake T. T. Lin , Eleanna Kafeza, Minhong
Wang,Haiyang Hu, Hua Hu, Yi Zhuang
2Introduction
- Disaster increasing frequency and severity
- epidemic outbreaks, natural disasters, major
accidents, terrorist attacks - SARS, Avian flu, tsunami,
- IS for disaster management badly required
- Unified framework for supporting all phases and
activities - different prediction, detection, and specific
handling activities - variety of organizations and personnel
- heterogeneous physical and information resources
- dynamic process and information integration
approach - human and system interactions
- resource allocation under urgency constraints
- timeliness in action
- Disaster Notification and Resource Allocation
System (DNRAS) - Based on Alert Management System (AMS)
3Example epidemic outbreaks
- SARS, Avian flu,
- Retrieve and analyze related patient records
- Monitor symptoms and patterns of spreading
- Records by fax or e-Mail result in
mis-interpretation - Serious consequences
- Timely notification - nearby countries
- Resource allocation
- Medicines and equipment
- Medical professionals
- Many parties in the interactions and negotiations
- Many estimations and uncertainties
4Requirements Overview
Local Government Authorities
Notification information
Storage
Pharmacies /HealthcareSupplies
Broadcast /Internet Media
Internet mobile devices
Mobile Individuals
Public/Victims
Experts
Officials
Administrators
Physicians
- Both human and computerized systems are involved
- Stakeholders have different degree of
computerization - Web Services supports both type of interactions
in a unified framework
5Role of Alerts in Strategic IS / DSS
Disaster Management Processes and Workflows
DNRAS Actions Notification, Information Request, Resource Allocation
Alerts Managed by AMS
Web Services and Mobile Devices
- What are Alerts?
- Different from general events, alerts have more
specific attributes, e.g., urgency and process
requirements. - Different from exceptions, they need not relate
to abnormal behaviors. - asynchronously received through business events /
exceptions / incoming requests - synchronously generated by internal business
application - handled by the AMS by requesting services from
- internal information systems
- management / human attention
- external e-Service providers
- 3R Retry, Reroute, Reassign
6System Architecture
7Alert Life Cycle
8System flow of a DNRAS node
Fetch next queuing request
DNRAS Scheduler Application Logic
Update response
Information request
Find the required information
Update the information
Generate and queue
in cached database
to cached database
required request
Information complete
Information
not complete
Aggregate the results
Reschedule the request
Receive request alert
Send request alert
Return an update response to
Send acknowledgement
from other DNRA node
the request node
to next node
Response
Alert ManagementSystem
9Alert Urgency Elevation
- Defining the policies according to which the
urgency of the alert will be elevated - Example
Urgency002 Action
Urgent Default
Very Urgent Submit a second alert to the pharmacy, notifying it about the approaching deadline
Critical Redirect the alert to another pharmacy or hospital that has the best expected response time
Very Critical Send the alert to several pharmacies and hospitals and accept those that respond early notify an administrator
10Web Services Summary
- Notification alerts - attend to the verification
and identification of the specific disease
problem using medical information - General information alerts - inquires for general
information - Resource alerts - identify the place that can
provide the requested information or resource - Personal information alerts - give information
for a specific person. - Database query / update Web services.
- See paper for detailed parameter examples.
11Advantages of Web services
- System integration - flexible process
orchestration in disaster management is able to
integrate with legacy applications. - Communication and Monitoring - the DARNS
infrastructure provides an interoperable system
architecture for creating an efficient
communication and monitoring infrastructure in
order to respond to disasters efficiently. - Intelligence - Complex disaster problems can be
identified and diagnosed in a timely way by
alert-based data communication and information
aggregation, and can be handled through flexible
resource allocation and process orchestration. - Scalability - easy to extend the system by adding
more web service based functionalities into each
node of DNRAS to improve data communication and
process coordination. - Reusability - The proposed architecture and Web
services are reusable by other applications for
flexible process orchestration in disaster
management.
12Lessons Learned
- Studied Toronto SARS outbreak 2003 case.
- Scarborough-Grace hospital were not alerted to
the possibility of an epidemic when several
relatives of the first victim were found to be
suffering from related symptoms and just
considered TB - Delays in identifying the outbreak are vital.
- Direct and efficient communication among
different agencies required. - When number of cases aggregated from the
hospitals of a city reached a specific threshold,
an alert for an epidemic disease could be
propagated to the public health office of the
region. - Lack of isolation rooms ICQ quarantined for
1214 days. - But continue to transfer patients to other
hospitals!! - Effective communication and resource allocation
is critical
13Lessons Learned (2)
- Physicians require efficient and immediate access
to personal information files related to an
epidemic outbreak. - Second SARS victim died in York Central Hospital
had been next to the first victim in
Scarborough-Grace hospital. - Information requests should be categorized
structured, monitored, and associated with
temporal deadlines. - Efficient information retrieval, aggregation, and
association might lead to an early diagnosis of
the disease - Communications, exchange of information, and
notifications are crucial.
14Applicability Discussion
- Government authorities
- Resolve existing problems involved in unreliable
manual procedures - Handle exceptions
- Liaise with variety of parties and personnel
- AMS monitors / tracks such alerts
- Trials and simulations
- Emergency service providers (hospitals /
pharmacies) - Fast rescue and recovery
- Locate resource holders for quick delivery
- Decision coordination
- Mobile individuals (healthcare professionals)
- Ensure necessary and correct personnel involved
- Records / information retrieval
- Improved communications
15Summary
- DNRAS, which supports alert notification and
resource allocation in the event of a disaster - Cached information in the node and nested query
requests to aggregate information - AMS for the coordination of various functions at
various stages of a disaster outbreak, including
detection, notification, remedy, and recovery. - DNRAS can be built and plugged into the existing
infrastructure of various stakeholders to bridge
internal systems and external partners to form a
grid - Improved information and process management
16Future Work
- Privacy control of personal records
- Exploring various settings of the urgency tables
- Context-awareness in ubiquitous communication
management - Complexity involved in the communication
processes - user communication management with agents
- Failure of commitments and their relation to
contract enforcement - Impact of cancellations, other possible
exceptions - E-negotiation subsystem for negotiating costs and
allocation - System dependability, such as redundant
connection links and nodes
17QA