Challenges for Early Responders to a Nuclear / Radiological Terrorism Incident
- Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District, Sacramento, CA (United States)
- Shaw Environmental, Inc, Monroeville, PA (United States)
- Shaw Environmental, Inc, Alpharetta, GA (United States)
- PELL Resources Company, Manassas, VA (United States)
Even in the best of circumstances, most municipalities would face severe challenges in providing effective incident response to a large scale radiation release caused by nuclear terrorism or accident. Compounding obvious complexities, the effectiveness of first and early responders to a radiological emergency may also be hampered by an insufficient distribution of radiation detection and monitoring equipment, local policies concerning triage and field decontamination of critical victims, malfunctioning communications, inadequate inter-agency agility, and the psychological 'fear' impact on early responders. This paper examines several issues impeding the early response to nuclear terrorism incidents with specific consideration given to the on-going and forward-thinking preparedness efforts currently being developed in the Sacramento, California region. Specific recommendations are provided addressing hot zone protocols, radiation detection and monitoring equipment, hasty patient packaging techniques, vertically and horizontally integrated pre-event training, mitigating psychological fear, and protocols for the effective 'hand-off' from first responders to subsequent early response-recovery teams. (authors)
- Research Organization:
- WM Symposia, 1628 E. Southern Avenue, Suite 9 - 332, Tempe, AZ 85282 (United States)
- OSTI ID:
- 21294772
- Report Number(s):
- INIS-US--09-WM-07449
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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