Login
Site Search
Trauma-List Subscription

Subscribe

Would you like to receive list emails batched into one daily digest?
No Yes
Modify Your Subscription

Modify

Home > List Archives

MEDICAL RESPONSE TO DISASTERS, incl DMAT, NDMS, etc

Bjorn, Pret pbjorn at emh.org
Mon Sep 15 15:15:02 BST 2008


Okay, ouch.  

Very well stated -- a sober and articulate reminder of our undeniable ethnocentrism.  America's well-earned reputation for humanitarian engagement has increasingly been eclipsed by less charitable acts and attitudes, to our certain shame and regret.

Still, I reject that the List is somehow complicit or sympathetic.  Indeed, I recall long List-mediated discussions in the aftermath of the Bam quake and the Indonesia tsunami and other (natural and man-made) disasters.  What you're seeing with Ike is simply a function of Ken Mattox (an expert in trauma and disaster response, and notably the most globally-oriented voice of the List) being in the wrong place at the right time.  Again.

Indeed, the world might be a better place if Dr. Mattox could -- safely -- observe and chronicle ALL such large-scale tragedies firsthand.  He brings unmatched energy and insight to the danger zone, for which I think we should be grateful.

Absent that, I offer my deep empathy to victims and providers all along Ike's path, and encourage subscribers to actively become the voice of those otherwise forgotten.  Surely there must someone in the Caribbean who can help us all understand the culture, the politics, the infrastructure, and the impact of these storms, that we might all suggest and discuss systematic responses.

Pret Bjorn, RN
Bangor, ME USA



-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Christos Giannou
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2008 7:41 AM
To: trauma-list at trauma.org
Subject: Re: MEDICAL RESPONSE TO DISASTERS, incl DMAT, NDMS, etc


Dear colleagues,

We have been reading about the American alphabet soup (DMAT, NDMS, FEMA etc)
of disaster response the last several days. The same hurricane that struck
Texas first killed hundreds and TOTALLY destroyed the city of Gonaïves in
Haïti. (To rebuild the city, they will probably have to reconstruct
somewhere else.) Strangely, there have been no messages on the list
concerning this phase of the hurricane.

Just a short reminder that natural catastrophes strike everywhere. In 2004,
a devastating earthquake in Bam, Iran. The Iranian Red Crescent Society
triaged 15,000 wounded in three days. Military and civilian airplanes then
distributed the wounded to all the major hospitals throughout the country.
By then, international help arrived (including an American military field
hospital), largely for political purposes, to deal with the public health
problems.

Take a close look at Bam 2004, the tsunami 2005, or Kashmir earthquake 2006,
earthquake in China just before the Olympics and Haïti, and Katrina, and
then compare. First step for a rapid and effective response: political will.
Everything else is secondary and follows afterwards.

This is for natural catastrophes; armed conflict is another matter, but the
response also depends upon political will, as a first step.

Before getting caught up in an entirely US of A-centered affair, it might be
worthwhile having a look at what happens elsewhere in the world.
Re-inventing wheels is such a waste of time.

-- 
christos giannou
Monemvasia Lakonia
23070 Greece
tel & fax: (++30) 27320-61772
mob: (++30) 69 74 83 28 18
--
trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG
To change your settings or unsubscribe visit:
http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/




More information about the trauma-list mailing list