TY - JOUR PY - 2012// TI - Applying modeling and simulation to predict human injury due to a blast attack on a shipboard environment JO - Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomic Society annual meeting A1 - Jacobs, Brigid A1 - Young, Lee Ann A1 - Champion, Howard R. A1 - Lawnick, Mary A1 - Galarneau, Michael A1 - Wing, Vern A1 - Krebs, William SP - 2359 EP - 2363 VL - 56 IS - 1 N2 - Computer models simulating blast effects on ship personnel are needed, but thus far, development of models has focused on simulating blast effects on ship structure and equipment. Thus, capability gaps exist in predicting the type and severity of injuries from surface or underwater weapon impact, estimating medical response requirements, and determining outcomes of patients. The Human Injury & Treatment (HIT) model addresses these gaps. Algorithms are utilized for scoring the type and severity of injuries predicted, using a variety of existing and developing injury models. Additional algorithms determine the post-injury level of incapacitation by evaluating how a physical impairment can impact performance of a task. A manning model simulates movement of personnel aboard the ship (Young, Allen, & Minks, 2011). It functions iteratively with the Tactical Medical Logistics (TML+) code, a medical response model predicting resource utilization and patient outcomes (Mitchell, 2004). Impact: HIT will help the Navy and commercial maritime interests anticipate medical response requirements resulting from blast attacks to a ship, and understand the impact of personnel loss on the crew's ability to perform damage control.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 2169-5067 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1071181312561438 ID - ref1 ER -