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Southern medical journal · Sep 2014
Creating a state medical response system for medical disaster management: the North Carolina experience.
- Randy D Kearns, Mary Beth Skarote, Jeff Peterson, Michael W Hubble, and James E Winslow.
- From the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, the North Carolina Office of Emergency Medical Services, Raleigh, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, and Wake Forest University Baptist Health, Winston Salem, North Carolina.
- South. Med. J. 2014 Sep 1; 107 (9): 540-8.
AbstractThe purpose of this work was to examine the creation and evolution of the North Carolina state medical response system (SMRS). During the past 30 years, states and local communities have developed a somewhat incongruent patchwork of medical disaster response systems. Several local or regional programs participated in the National Disaster Medical System; however, aside from the Disaster Medical Assistance Teams, most of these local resources lacked national standards and national direction. The September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in Washington, DC and New York, and the anthrax-laced letters mailed to prominent individuals in the US media and others (bioterrorism) in the months that followed were tragic, but they served as both a tipping point and a unifying factor to drive preparedness activities on a national level. Each state responded to the September 11, 2001 attacks by escalating planning and preparedness efforts for a medical disaster response. The North Carolina SMRS was created based on the overall national direction and was tailored to meet local needs such as hurricane response. This article reviews the accomplishments to date and examines future aims. From regional medical response teams to specialty programs such as ambulance strike teams, burn surge planning, electronic inventory and tracking systems, and mobile pharmacy resources, the North Carolina SMRS has emerged as a national leader. Each regional coalition, working with state leadership, has developed resources and has used those resources while responding to disasters in North Carolina. The program is an example of how national leadership can work with state and local agencies to develop a comprehensive and effective medical disaster response system.
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