
Disasters are difficult to manage for many reasons: the immediacy of the event, magnitude of the event, lack of evidence-based practices, and the limited usefulness of many developed protocols. Consequently, combining academic approaches with realistic and practical recommendations continues to be an underdeveloped aspect of disaster texts. The Oxford American Handbook of Disaster Medicine offers a functional blend of science with pragmatism. Approached from a real-world perspective, the handbook is a portable guide that provides sufficient scientific background to facilitate broader application and problem solving yet approach the topic in a prioritized fashion, supporting rapid understanding and utilization. Contributing authors are clinical and public health providers with disaster experience. This book encompasses the entire scope of disaster medicine from general concepts and fundamental principles to both manmade and natural threats.
This handbook investigates the challenge of managing large-scale disasters by bridging the gap between academic theory and practical, field-ready clinical protocols. Authored by a team of clinical and public health providers with direct disaster experience, the text provides a framework that prioritizes rapid decision-making. It synthesizes scientific background with pragmatic application to ensure that responders can effectively address both manmade and natural threats in high-pressure environments.
What You Will Find
Experts and clinical practitioners recognize this text as a functional, portable resource for those operating in the field of disaster response. Readers frequently note the balance between scientific rigor and the prioritized, actionable advice necessary for emergency management.
Page Count:
864
Publication Date:
2012-04-12
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195379063
ISBN-13:
9780195379068
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