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Library

Disaster Preparedness

  1. Ahmed H, Ahmed M, et al. Syrian revolution: a field hospital under attack. Am J Disaster Med 2013;8(4); 259–265.

  2. American Academy of Pediatrics (Foltin GL, Schonfeld DJ, Shannon MW, eds.). Pediatric Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness: A Resource for Pediatricians. AHRQ Publication No. 06- 0056-EF. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; 2006. http://www.ahrq. org/research/pedprep/resource.htm. Accessed February 26, 2008.

  3. Bartal C, Zeller L, Miskin I, et al. Crush syndrome: saving more lives in disasters, lessons learned from the early-response phase in Haiti. Arch Intern Med 2011;171(7):694–696.

  4. Born C, Briggs SM, Ciraulo DL, et al. Disasters and mass casualties: II. Explosive, biologic, chemical, and nuclear agents. J Am Acad of Orthop Surg 2007;15:8:461–473.

  5. Briggs, SM. Advanced Disaster Medical Response, Manual for Providers. 2nd ed. Woodbury, CT: Cine- Med; 2014.

  6. Committee on Trauma, American College of Surgeons. Disaster Management and Emergency Preparedness Course. Chicago, IL: American College of Surgeons; 2009.

  7. Gutierrez de Ceballos JP, Turegano-Fuentes F, Perez-Diaz D, et al. 11 March 2004: the terrorist bomb explosions in Madrid, Spain— an analysis of the logistics, injuries sustained and clinical management of casualties treated at the closest hospital. Crit Care 2005;9: 104–111. 

  8. Holden, PJ. Perspective: the London attacks—a chronicle. N Engl J Med 2005;353:541–550.

  9. Kales SN, Christiani DC. Acute chemical emergencies. N Engl J Med 2004;350(8):800–808.

  10. Kearns, R, Skarote, MB, Peterson, J, et al. Deployable, portable and temporary hospitals; one state’s experiences through the years, Am J Disaster Med 2014;9(3):195–207. 

  11. Latifi, R, Tilley, E. Telemedicine for disaster management: can it transform chaos into an organized, structured care from the distance? Am J Dis Medicine 2014;9(1):25–37.

  12. Lin G, Lavon H, Gelfond R, et al. Hard times call for creative solutions: medical improvisations at the Israel Defense Forces Field Hospital in Haiti. Am J Disaster Med 2010 May–June;5(3):188–192.

  13. Mettler FA, Voelz GL. Major radiation exposure— what to expect and how to respond. N Engl J Med 2002;346(20):1554–1561.

  14. Musolino SV, Harper FT. Emergency response guidance for the first 48 hours after the outdoor detonation of an explosive radiological dispersal device. Health Phys 2006;90(4):377–385.

  15. Pediatric Task Force, Centers for Bioterrorism Preparedness Planning, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (Arquilla B, Foltin G, Uraneck K, eds.). Children in Disasters: Hospital Guidelines for Pediatric Preparedness. 3rd ed. New York: New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene; 2008. https://www1.nyc.gov/ assets/doh/downloads/pdf/bhpp/hepp-peds- childrenindisasters-010709.pdf. Accessed January 4, 2017.

  16. Sechriest, VF, Wing V, et al. Healthcare delivery aboard US Navy hospital ships following earthquake disasters: implications for future disaster relief missions. Am J of Disaster Med 2012;7(4):281–294.

  17. Sever MS, Vanholder R, Lameire N. Management of crush-related injuries after disasters. N Engl J Med 2006;354(10):1052–1063.

  18. Weiner DL, Manzi SF, Briggs SM, et al. Response to challenges and lessons learned from hurricanes Katrina and Rita: a national perspective. Pediatrics 2011;128:S31.

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