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Journal Article

Citation

Jacobitz KL, Nailon RE. Health Secur. 2020; 18(3): 195-204.

Affiliation

Regina E. Nailon PhD, RN, is Patient Safety Program Director, Nebraska Coalition for Patient Safety, Omaha, NE.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Mary Ann Liebert Publishers)

DOI

10.1089/hs.2019.0124

PMID

32559158

Abstract

The United States constantly faces the threat of large-scale disasters caused by natural and human factors. Emergency medical services, other first responders, and emergency department professionals are responsible for triaging and caring for victims of mass casualty incidents that include biological, chemical, and radiological agents. These providers need immediate access to individuals with expertise in infectious disease, medical toxicology, and biological, chemical, and radiological exposure who are readily available or easily accessible in the event of an emergency. Poison centers play a key public health role during disasters, in part because of the specialized training staff-including medical toxicologists-receive in all facets of toxic exposure risk identification, assessment, and management, which are foundational areas critical to disaster health response. Integrating poison centers into the public health infrastructure and public health surveillance is crucial for disaster response. Through enhanced partnerships with public health agencies, poison centers have leveraged their readily accessible expertise and surveillance capabilities to expand their roles in disaster planning and response. This paper highlights the pivotal role the Nebraska Regional Poison Center plays in preparing for and responding to disasters and other public health emergencies at local, state, and regional levels. With an emphasis on its role in risk assessment and management in partnership with healthcare coalitions and public health departments, we recommend the Nebraska Regional Poison Center as a model to inform other poison centers across the United States.


Language: en

Keywords

Countermeasures; Poison center response; Public health preparedness/response; Surveillance

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