Emergency Readiness

Emergency Readiness: Lessons Learned: Experienced-based

Lessons Learned

Experience-Based

ACTS OF TERRORISM


  • By Kyle B. Olson, Research Planning, Inc., Arlington, Virginia (July-August 1999)
    On March 20, 1995, members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult entered the Tokyo subway system and released sarin, a deadly nerve agent. The subway attack was the most deadly assault in an ongoing campaign of terror waged by this mysterious cult. Four years later, with Aum Shinrikyo attempting to rebuild itself, many in Japan and around the world are asking whether the "Supreme Truth Sect" poses a current or future threat. Answering this question may further our understanding, not only of the Aum but also of other extremist and terrorist groups.
  • , September 28, 2001
    MMWR 50(38);821-2
  • The Oklahoma City Bombing: Lessons Learned by Hospitals, May 2001
  • A Day of Tragedy for Oklahomans . . . and the World, November 1997
    Presentation by Sheryl McLain

NATURAL DISASTERS

  • , December 2005
  • , October 2005
  • , October 2005
    More than a decade after Hurricane Andrew, Florida hospitals offer stark lessons--and long-term hope--for their devastated counterparts in Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi.
  • , July 1, 2001
    Houston-area hospitals were thrown into disaster mode last month after flooding from Tropical Storm Allison knocked out emergency power, water and telecommunications to portions of the Texas Medical Center campus.
  • , April 1, 2001
    Famine and locusts aren't too likely to devastate U.S. health care facilities these days. But, otherwise, facility managers have to be prepared for just about any biblical or other disaster. Even if you've been disaster-free for the past few years, experts warn not to give short shrift to planning, because that rainy--or windy, quaky or otherwise crisis-ridden--day is probably inevitable.
  • , September 20, 1999
    Although Hurricane Floyd did not turn out to be "the storm of the century," its impact will be felt by many for quite some time. Floyd left his mark all along the East Coast, causing flooding, power outages and wind damage, killing at least 16 people, and putting hospital disaster-preparedness plans to the test.
  • , October 20, 1998
    The summer fires that ravaged parts of Florida tested Memorial Health Systems in ways no disaster drill could have.
  • , January 19, 1998
    Hospitals and other Northeastern health care providers have been hit hard by the Great Ice Storm of 1998.