2. What is disaster management
???
“A disaster can be defined as any occurrence
that cause damage, ecological disruption, loss of
human life, deterioration of health and health
services on a scale, sufficient to warrant an
extraordinary response from outside the affected
community or area”.
(W.H.O.)
“A disaster can be defined as an occurrence
either nature or manmade that causes human
suffering and creates human needs that victims
cannot alleviate without assistance”.
American Red Cross (ARC) ’
4. What it involves ??
Dealing with and avoiding both natural
and man made disasters.
Preparedness before disaster.
Rebuilding and supporting society after
natural disasters.
5. BACKGROUND
Enormous population pressures and
urbanization
A flood, a drought or an earthquake millions
of peoples are affected each time a disaster
occurs
Large-scale displacement and the loss of
life, loss of property and agricultural crops
6. BACKGROUND
The reasons for this are varied including:
an increasing population pressures in urban
areas
an increase in the extent of encroachment
into lands, e.g., river beds or drainage
courses, low lying areas etc.
poor or ignored zoning laws and policies
lack of proper risk management (insurance)
7. TYPES OF DISASTER
Natural
Disasters
Hydro-
Meteorological
Topographical
Environmental
Man-made
Disasters
Technological
Industrial
accidents
Security related
8. CHARACTERISTIC OF DISASTER
Predictability
Controllability
Speed of onset
Length of
forewarning
Duration of impact
Scope and intensity
of impact
11. PRINCIPLES OF DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Disaster management is the responsibility of all
spheres of government
Disaster management should use resources that
exist for a day-to-day purpose.
Organizations should function as an extension of
their core business
Individuals are responsible for their own safety.
Disaster management planning should focus on
large-scale events.
12. Contd….
DM planning should recognize the difference
between incidents and disasters.
DM planning must take account of the type of
physical environment and the structure of the
population.
DM arrangements must recognise the involvement
and potential role of non- government agencies.
14. Disaster preparedness
Preparedness should be in the form of
money, manpower and materials
Evaluation from past experiences about risk
Location of disaster prone areas
Organization of communication, information
and warning system
Ensuring co-ordination and response
mechanisms
15. Contd….
Development of public education
programme
Co-ordination with media
National & international relations
Keeping stock of foods, drug and other
essential commodities.
16. E.g.: Indian Meteorological department (IMD) plays a key role
in forewarning the disaster of cyclone-storms by detection tracing. It has
5 centres in Kolkata, Bhubaneswar, Vishakapatanam, Chennai &
Mumbai. In addition there are 31 special observation posts setup a long
the east coast of India.
The International Agencies which provides humanitarian assistance to the
disaster strike areas are United Nation agencies.
Office for the co-ordination of Humanitarian Affair (OCHA)
World Health Organization (WHO)
UNICEF
World Food Programme (WFP)
Food & Agricultural Organisation (FAD)
E.g.: Non Governmental Organizations
Co-Operative American Relief Every where (CARE)
International committee of Red cross
International committee of Red cross
20. Disaster mitigation
This involves lessening the likely effects of emergencies.
These include depending upon the disaster, protection of
vulnerable population and structure.
Eg. improving structural qualities of schools, houses and such other
buildings so that medical causalities can be minimized.
Similarly ensuring the safety of health facilities and public health
services including water supply and sewerage system to reduce the
cost of rehabilitation and reconstruction.
This mitigation compliments the disaster preparedness and disaster
response activities.
21. DISASTER-EFFECTS
Deaths
Disability
Increase in communicable disease
Psychological problems
Food shortage
Socioeconomic losses
Shortage of drugs and medical supplies.
Environmental disruption
22. DISASTER RECOVERY
Successful Recovery Preparation
Be vigilant in Health teaching
Psychological support
Referrals to hospital as needed
Remain alert for environmental health
Nurse must be attentive to the danger
23. Major Disasters in India
1984 Bhopal Gas Tragedy
2001 Gujarat earthquake
2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
2008 Mumbai attacks
24. India’s Vulnerability to Disasters
57% land is vulnerable to earthquakes. Of these,
12% is vulnerable to severe earthquakes.
68% land is vulnerable to drought.
12% land is vulnerable to floods.
8% land is vulnerable to cyclones.
Apart from natural disasters, some cities in India
are also vulnerable to chemical and industrial
disasters and man-made disasters.
25. GOI – NGO Disaster preparation
and Response Committee
Members
World Vision of India
SOS Children's Village India
Ramakrishna Mission
Plan international
OXFAM India Trust
Lutheran World Service India
Red Cross
Catholic Relief Services
CASA
CARITAS India
Voluntary Health association Of India
Action Aid
Action for Food Production-AFPRO
Indo German Social Services Society
26. Areas of Concern
Activating an Early Warning System network and its
close monitoring
Mechanisms for integrating the scientific,
technological and administrative agencies for
effective disaster management
Terrestrial communication links which collapse in the
event of a rapid onset disaster
Vulnerability of critical infrastructures (power supply,
communication, water supply, transport, etc.) to
disaster events
27. Contd…
Funding : Primacy of relief as disaster response.
Preparedness and Mitigation very often ignored.
Lack of integrated efforts to collect and compile data,
information and local knowledge on disaster history and
traditional response patterns.
Need for standardized efforts in compiling and interpreting
geo-spatial data, satellite imagery and early warning signals.
Weak areas continue to be forecasting, modeling, risk
prediction, simulation and scenario analysis, etc.
28. Contd…
Absence of a national level, state level, and district level
directory of experts and inventory of resources.
Absence of a National Disaster Management Plan, and
State level and district level disaster management plans.
Sustainability of efforts
Effective Inter Agency Co-ordination and Standard
Operating Procedures for stakeholder groups, especially
critical first responder agencies.
Emergency medicine, critical care medicine, triage, first
aid
29. Nodal Agencies for Disaster Management
Floods : Ministry of Water Resources, CWC
Cyclones : Indian Meteorological Department
Earthquakes : Indian Meteorological Department
Epidemics : Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
Avian Flu: Ministry of Health, Ministry of Environment,
Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Husbandry
30. Nodal Agencies for Disaster Management
Chemical Disasters : Ministry of Environment and
Forests
Industrial Disasters : Ministry of Labour
Rail Accidents : Ministry of Railways
Air Accidents : Ministry of Civil Aviation
Fire : Ministry of Home Affairs
Nuclear Incidents : Department of Atomic Energy
Mine Disasters : Department of Mines
31. Dynamics of Disasters
There is a high probability or a low probability for an
event happening somewhere sometime soon…
The unpredictability of disaster events and the high
risk and vulnerability profiles make it imperative to
strengthen disaster preparedness, mitigation and
enforcement of guidelines, building codes and
restrictions on construction of buildings in flood-prone
areas and storm surge prone coastal areas.
32. New Directions for Disaster Management in
India
The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has
been set up as the apex body for Disaster Management in
India, with the Prime Minister as its Chairman.
Disaster Management Authorities will be set up at the State
and District Levels to be headed by the Chief Ministers and
Collectors/Zilla Parishad Chairmen respectively.
33. New Directions for Disaster Management in
India
A National Disaster Mitigation Fund will be administerd by NDMA.
States and districts will administer mitigation funds.
A National Disaster Response Fund will be administerd by NDMA
through the National Executive Committee. States and Districts will
administer state Disaster Response Fund and Disaster Response Fund
respectively.
8 Battalions of National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) are being
trained and deployed with CSSR and MFR equipments and tools in
eight strategic locations.
A National Disaster Management Policy and National Disaster
Response Plan will also be drawn up.
34. Lessons Learnt
Be Prepared : Preparedness and Mitigation is
bound to yield more effective returns than
distributing relief after a disaster.
Create a Culture of Preparedness and
Prevention.
Evolve a code of conduct for all stake-holders
35. Future Directions
Encourage and consolidate knowledge networks
Mobilise and train disaster volunteers for more
effective preparedness, mitigation and response
(NSS, NCC, Scouts and Guides, NYK, Civil Defence,
Homeguards)
Increased capacity building leads to faster
vulnerability reduction.
Learn from best practices in disaster preparedness,
mitigation and disaster response
36. Future Directions
Mobilising stakeholder participation of Self Help
Groups, Women’s Groups, Youth Groups, Panchayati
Raj Institutions
Anticipatory Governance: Simulation exercises, Mock
drills and Scenario Analysis
Indigenous knowledge systems and coping practices
Living with Risk: Community Based Disaster Risk
Management
37. Invest in Preparedness
Investments in Preparedness and Prevention
(Mitigation) will yield sustainable results, rather than
spending money on relief after a disaster.
Most disasters are predictable, especially in their
seasonality and the disaster-prone areas which are
vulnerable.
Communities must be involved in disaster
preparedness.
38. Future Directions
Inclusive, participatory, gender sensitive, child
friendly, eco-friendly and disabled friendly
disaster management
Technology driven but people owned
Knowledge Management: Documentation and
dissemination of good practices
Public Private Partnership
39. Best Practices
On 12 November, 1970 a major cyclone hit the coastal belt of
Bangladesh at 223 km/hr. with a storm surge of six to nine
meters height, killing an estimated 500,000 people.
Due to the Cyclone Preparedness Program, the April 1991
cyclone with wind speed of 225 km/hr. killed only 138,000
people even though the coastal population had doubled by
that time.
In May 1994, in a similar cyclone with a wind speed of 250
km/hr. only 127 people lost their lives.
In May 1997, in a cyclone with wind speed of 200 km/hr. only
111 people lost their lives.
40. New possibilities
National Urban Renewal Mission for 70 cities:
recent experience of “unprecedented”
extreme weather conditions in a few major
metros and megacities
100,000 Rural Knowledge Centres
( IT Kiosks): Need for Spatial e-Governance for
informed decision making in disaster-prone
areas: before, during and after disasters
41. Disaster Reduction Day
NIDM observed "Disaster Reduction Day" on the
12th October
Rallies and special lectures were organized in the
universities and colleges to mark the initiatives of
awareness for disaster reduction amongst youth &
children
Children's Colour Activity Book for Disaster
Preparedness
42. FOR INFORMATION ON DISASTERS DIAL
TOLL FREE No. 1070
Log on to http://www.ndmindia.nic.in
43. DISASTER NURSING
It can be defined as the adaptation of
professional nursing skills in recognizing
and meeting the nursing, physical and
emotional needs resulting from a
disaster.
1.India is a country highly vulnerable to natural disasters.
2.Enormous population pressures and urbanization have forced people to live on marginal lands or in cities where they are at greater risk to disasters.
3.Whether it is a flood, a drought or an earthquake, millions of peoples are affected each time a disaster occurs.
In addition to large-scale displacement and the loss of life, these events result in the loss of property and agricultural crops worth thousand of Crores of rupees annually.
The reasons for this are varied including:
an increasing population pressures in urban areas
an increase in the extent of encroachment into lands, e.g., river beds or drainage courses, low lying areas etc.
poor or ignored zoning laws and policies
lack of proper risk management (insurance)
In India the primary responsibility for responding to disasters lies at the State level.
Many states have yet to prepare Disaster Management Plans.
Section 11 of DM Act provides that “There shall be drawn up a plan for Disaster Management for the whole of the Country to be called National Plan.”
The National Response Plan to be prepared by an Inter Ministerial Central Team formed by the NEC in the MHA Spanning all the Central Ministries/Departments.
The Mitigation and Preparedness Plans
The National Human Resource and Capacity Building Plan To be prepared by National Institute of Disaster Management,