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Journal Article

Citation

Okumura T, Ninomiya N, Ohta M. Prehosp. Disaster Med. 2003; 18(3): 189-192.

Affiliation

Emergency Department, Juntendo University Hospital, Bunkyo-City, Tokyo, Japan. xj2t-okmr@asahi-net.or.jp

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15141857

Abstract

During the last decade, Japan has experienced the largest burden of chemical terrorism-related events in the world, including the: (1) 1994 Matsumoto sarin attack; (2) 1995 Tokyo subway sarin attack; (3) 1998 Wakayama arsenic incident; (4) 1998 Niigata sodium-azide incident; and (5) 1998 Nagano cyanide incident. Two other intentional cyanide releases in Tokyo subway and railway station restrooms were thwarted in 1995. These events spurred Japan to improve the following components of its chemical disaster-response system: (1) scene demarcation; (2) emergency medical care; (3) mass decontamination; (4) personal protective equipment; (5) chemical detection; (6) information-sharing and coordination; and (7) education and training. Further advances occurred as result of potential chemical terrorist threats to the 2000 Kyushu-Okinawa G8 Summit, which Japan hosted. Today, Japan has an integrated system of chemical disaster response that involves local fire and police services, local emergency medical services (EMS), local hospitals, Japanese Self-Defense Forces, and the Japanese Poison Information Center.


Language: en

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