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OverviewThis comprehensive reference provides all the information emergency departments and personnel need to prepare for and respond to terrorist events. The first section covers all agents potentially used in terrorist attacks0/00chemical, biologic, toxicologic, nuclear, and explosive0/00in a systematic format that includes background, triage, decontamination, signs and symptoms, medical management, personnel protection, and guidelines for notifying public health networks. Algorithms show when to suspect and how to recognize exposure and detail signs and symptoms and management protocols. The second section focuses on all-hazards preparedness for hospitals, communities, emergency medical services, and the media, and includes an important chapter on simulation of disasters. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Daniel C. Keyes , Jonathan L. Burstein , Richard B. Schwartz , Raymond E. SwientonPublisher: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins Imprint: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins Edition: 2nd Revised edition Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 1.406kg ISBN: 9780781749862ISBN 10: 0781749867 Pages: 581 Publication Date: 20 October 2004 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsPART ONE: AGENTS OF TERRORISM AND MEDICAL MANAGEMENT . . . 1 Section 1: Chemical Terrorism . . . 2 Section 2: Biological Agents . . . 56 Section 3: Biochemical Terrorism . . . 117 Section 4: Nuclear Terrorism . . . 137 Section 5: Explosives and Traumatic Terrorism . . . 198 PART TWO: ALL-HAZARDS PREPAREDNESS FOR TERRORISM . . . 219 Section 6: Planning Preparedness for Terrorism . . . 220 Section 7: Equipment Preparedness for Terrorism . . . 284 Section 8: Communications Preparedness for Terrorism . . . 312 Section 9: Training Preparedness for Terrorism . . . 329 Section 10: Operational Medical Preparedness for Terrorism . . . 350 Section 11: Special Considerations for Terrorist Events . . . 389 Index 439ReviewsEmergency Medicine Australasia, 01-DEC-05, Joseph Ting, MB BS (Qld), B Med Sci (Hons) -- Medical Response to Terrorism: Preparedness and Clinical Practice is well timed (in the wake of the attacks on London), with seemingly unbridled escalation in terrorist activity, heightened societal awareness, and fear of, attack...This book provides a superb foundation upon which to base more practical, easy to use, site specific disaster algorithms and protocols for each jurisdiction or health-care facility. -Emergency Medicine Australasia The California Journal of Emergency Medicine, 01-JUL-05, Michael Casner, MD -- Medical Response to Terrorism was written to provide 'expert guidance for preparing and responding to terrorist events,' and it largely succeeds. Gathering some of the world's experts on the medical response to terrorism, this book is a comprehensive and clearly organized resource for those in the medical profession who need to be prepared for the effects of a terrorist attack...The clarity and organization of this book would lend themselves to a quick reference guide. -The California Journal of Emergency Medicine The New England Journal of Medicine, 12-JAN-06, Volume 354, Karl M. Johnson, MD -- Medical Response to Terrorism takes up the disparate challenges involved in coping with a terrorist assault on innocent civilians. Tightly written, this book has a standard, detailed outline, numerous summary tables, and a short multiple-choice quiz at the end of each chapter. It is clearly a textbook for the many groups of individuals and organizations that will be called into action after an attack-whether chemical, biologic, or explosive-or even a hit on the computerized systems that run hospitals and communication networks. This book is probably destined to be the basic textbook for training sessions supported by the Department of Homeland Security and various state agencies, and it would help immensely if it, like Biological Weapons Defense, were available as a CD-ROM, for immediate reference. -Targeting Bioterrorism, by Karl M. Johnson, MD, in The New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 354, January 12, 2006, pp. 213-215. Copyright (c) 2006 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. The New England Journal of Medicine is a registered trademark of the MMS. Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |