Title: Public Health Disaster Consequences of Disasters
1Public Health Disaster Consequences of Disasters
- Eric K. Noji, M.D., M.P.H.
- Medical Epidemiologist Centers
- for Disease Control Prevention
- Washington, DC
- Second Annual John C. Cutler
- Global Health Lecture and Award
- University of Pittsburgh
- 29 September 2005
2- This lecture has been supported by John C.
Cutler Memorial Global Fund, Graduate School of
Public Health, University of Pittsburgh - Coordinated through the Global Health Network
Supercourse project, WHO Collaborating Centre,
Uni. Of Pittsburgh - Faina Linkov, Ph.D.
- Eugene Shubnikov, MD,
- Mita Lovalekar, M.D.,
- Ronald LaPorte, Ph.D.
www.pitt.edu/super1/
3Definition of Disaster
- A disaster is a result of a vast ecological
breakdown in the relation between humans and
their environment, a serious or sudden event on
such a scale that the stricken community needs
extraordinary efforts to cope with it, often with
outside help or international aid -
- Source
- EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences of
Disaster
4Disasters and Emergencies
Natural Disasters Transportation
Disasters Terrorism
Technological Disasters Pandemics
51994-2004 A Decade of Natural Disasters
- 1 million thunderstorms
- 100,000 floods
- Tens of thousands of landslides, earthquakes,
wildfires tornadoes - Several thousand hurricanes, tropical cyclones,
tsunamis volcanoes - Sources
- CDC EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences of
Disaster
6Factors Contributing to Disaster Severity
- Human vulnerability due to poverty social
inequality - Environmental degradation
- Rapid population growth especially among the poor
- Sources
- CDC EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences of
Disaster
7Influence of Population Growth
- Urban dwellers
- 1920 100 million
- 1980 1 billion
- 2004 2 billion
- 2004 20 cities with gt10 million people
- Sources
- CDC EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences of
Disaster
8Political destabilization in the post Cold War
era with increased regional violence
9Escalating ethnic based conflicts with civilians
as military targets
10Forced Migration
11Emerging themes in EpidemiologyThe role
of the applied epidemiologist in armed
conflictSharon M McDonnell, Paul Bolton, Nadine
Sunderland, Ben Bellows, Mark White and Eric
NojiFor more information visithttp//www.ete-o
nline.com/content/1/1/4(biomed central)
12Epidemiology and its applications in measuring
the effects of disasters
- Epidemiology
- The quantitative study of the distribution and
determinants of health related events in human
populations
13Disaster Epidemiology
- Assessment and Surveillance
- Injury and disease profiles
- Research methodologies
- Disaster management
- Vulnerability and hazard assessment
14Disaster Epidemiology
Data for Decision-Making
- Purpose
- Identify requirements, local capabilities, gaps
- Avoid unnecessary and damaging assistance
15"The reason for collecting, analyzing and
disseminating information on a disease is to
control that disease. Collection and analysis
should not be allowed to consume resources if
action does not follow."
- William H. Foege, M.D.
- International Journal of Epidemiology 1976
529-37
16Objectives of Health Information Systems in
Emergency Populations
- Establish health care priorities
- Follow trends and reassess priorities
- Detect and respond to epidemics
- Evaluate program effectiveness
- Ensure targeting of resources
- Evaluate quality of health care
17Myths and Disaster Realities
- 1) Myth Foreign medical volunteers with any
kind of medical background are needed. - Reality
- The local population almost always covers
immediate lifesaving needs. - Only skills that are not available in the
affected country may be needed. - Few survivors owe their lives to outside teams
182) Myth Any kind of assistance is needed, and
its needed now!
- Reality
- A hasty response not based on impartial
evaluation only contributes to chaos - Un-requested goods are inappropriate, burdensome,
divert scarce resources, and more often burned
than separated and inventoried - Not wanted, seldom needed used clothing, OTC,
prescription drugs, or blood products medical
teams or field hospitals.
193) Myth Epidemics and plagues are inevitable
after every disaster.
- Reality
- Epidemics rarely ever occur after a disaster
- Dead bodies will not lead to catastrophic
outbreaks of exotic diseases - Proper resumption of public health services will
ensure the publics safety - Immunizations, sanitation, waste disposal, water
quality, and food safety - Caveat Criminal or terror-intent disasters
require special considerations
204) Myth Disasters bring out the worst in
human behavior.
- Reality While isolated cases of antisocial
behavior exist, the majority of people response
spontaneously and generously
40-60 Drop in murder rate surprises NYC-
fewest since 1958. - USA Today 03/25/2002Â
Kenyans line up for 2-3 km in August heat to
donate blood after US Embassy bombing
215) Myth The community is too shocked
and helpless
- Reality
- Many find new strengths
- Cross-cultural dedication to common good is most
common response to natural disasters - Thousands volunteer to rescue strangers and sift
through rubble after earthquakes from Mexico
City, California, and Turkey. Most rescue,
first aid, and transport is from other casualties
and bystanders
22 WHAT DOES THE FUTURE HOLD?
23Increasing disaster risk
- Increasing population density
- Increased settlement in high-risks areas
- Increased technological hazards and dependency
- Increased terrorism biological, chemical,
nuclear? - Aging population in industrialized countries
- Emerging infectious diseases (SARS)
- International travel (global village)
24- Increasing Global Travel
- Rapid access to large populations
- Poor global security awareness
...create the potential for simultaneous creation
of large numbers of casualties
25Health Information Needs in Emergency Populations
- Establish health care priorities
- Follow trends and reassess priorities
- Detect and respond to epidemics
- Evaluate program effectiveness
- Ensure targeting of resources
- Evaluate quality of health care
26Final Thought
- NOTHING REPLACES WELL TRAINED, COMPETENT AND
MOTIVATED PEOPLE! NOTHING! - PEOPLE ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT ASSET
27EXTRA SLIDES
- Please refer to Cutler lecture website
- http//www.publichealth.pitt.edu/
specialevents/cutler2005/webcast.html - to obtain full version of the lecture
28Epidemiologic Methods in Disasters
- After a disaster (Reconstruction Phase)
- Conducting post-disaster epidemiologic follow-up
studies - Identifying risk factors for death injury
- Planning strategies to reduce impact-related
morbidity mortality - Source EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences
of Disaster
29Epidemiologic Methods in Disasters
- After a disaster (Reconstruction Phase)
- Developing specific interventions
- Evaluating effectiveness of interventions
- Conducting descriptive analytical studies
- Planning medical public health response to
future disasters - Conducting long-term follow-up of
rehabilitation/reconstruction activities - Source EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences
of Disaster
30Epidemiologic Methods in Disasters
- Challenges for Epidemiologists
- Applying epidemiologic methods in the context of
- Physical destruction
- Public fear
- Social disruption
- Lack of infrastructure for data collection
- Time urgency
- Movement of populations
- Lack of local support and expertise
- Source EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences
of Disaster
31Epidemiologic Methods in Disasters
- Challenges for Epidemiologists
- Selecting study designs
- Cross-sectional
- Studies of frequencies of deaths, illnesses,
injuries, adverse health affects - Limited by absence of population counts
- Case-control
- Best study to determine risk factors, eliminate
confounding, study interactions among multiple
factors - Limited by definition of specific outcomes,
issues of selection of cases controls - Source EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences
of Disaster
32Epidemiologic Methods in Disasters
- Challenges for Epidemiologists
- Selecting study designs
- Longitudinal
- Studies document incidence and estimate
magnitude of risk - Limited by logistics of mounting a study in a
post-disaster environment and subject follow-up - Source EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences
of Disaster
33Epidemiologic Methods in Disasters
- Challenges for Epidemiologists
- Need standardized protocols for data collection
immediately following disaster - Need standardized terminology, technologies,
methods and procedures - Need operational research to inventory medical
supplies and determine 1) actual needs, 2) local
capacity, 3) needs met by national/international
communities - Need evaluation studies to determine efficiency
and effectiveness of relief efforts and emergency
interventions - Source EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences
of Disaster
34Epidemiologic Methods in Disasters
- Challenges for Epidemiologists
- Need databases for epidemiologic research based
on existing disaster information systems - Need to identify injury prevention interventions
- Need to improve timely and appropriate medical
care following disaster (search rescue,
emergency medical services, importing skilled
providers, evacuating the injured) - Need measures to quickly reestablish local health
care system at full operating capacity soon after
disaster - Source EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences
of Disaster
35Epidemiologic Methods in Disasters
- Challenges for Epidemiologists
- Need uniform disaster-related injury definitions
and classification scheme - Need investigations of disease transmission
following disasters and public health measures to
mitigate disease risk - Need to study problems associated with massive
influx of relief supplies and relief personnel - Need cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analyses
- Source EK Noji, The Public Health Consequences
of Disaster