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Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary (2014)

Chapter: Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism

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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix G: Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18347.
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G Day 30: The Impact of Mass Evacuations on Host Communities Following Nuclear Terrorism A white paper prepared for the January 23–24, 2013, workshop on Nationwide Response to an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack, hosted by the Institute of Medi- cine’s Forum on Medical and Public Health Prepared- ness for Catastrophic Events together with the National Association of County and City Health Officials. The au- thor is responsible for the content of this article, which does not necessarily represent the views of the Institute of Medicine. By: Irwin Redlener, M.D., Director David M. Abramson, Ph.D., M.P.H., Deputy Director Derrin Culp, M.I.A., M.C.R.P., Research Associate National Center for Disaster Preparedness Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health INTRODUCTION Since the Institute of Medicine (IOM) conducted its 2008 Workshop on Assessing Medical Preparedness for a Nuclear Event, scientists, policy makers, and public health and emergency management professionals have dramatically increased their focus on preparedness issues related to a terrorist attack with an improvised nuclear device (IND).1 In a relatively 1 Benjamin, George, McGeary, Michael, McCutchen, Susan R., ed. 2009. Assessing Medical Preparedness to Respond to a Terrorist Nuclear Event: Workshop Report: Insti- tute of Medicine of the National Academies. http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php/record_id= 12578. 161

162 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK short time, awareness and understanding of the risks associated with in- frastructure damage, radiation, medical countermeasures, sheltering vs. evacuation strategies, inadequate medical and public health surge capaci- ty, mass fatality management, and a host of other issues have expanded significantly. This includes an appreciation of the tremendous gaps that remain in every American city’s ability to respond to such an event if it were the target, even with the full resources of state and federal govern- ment brought to bear. It also has been widely noted, that depending upon the scale of an evacuation that might follow an IND detonation, commu- nities and local governments at the destination end could be over- whelmed, as well.2 This paper sets the stage for a thorough and systematic discussion of an issue that has been widely recognized, but that so far has received lit- tle attention: Upon an act of nuclear terrorism in a major city, what would be the mid- to long-term public health and related implications for communities that abruptly and involuntarily become host to large num- bers of evacuees? In effect, how would a host community accommodate enormous and sudden population expansion under such circumstances? To the extent that researchers and policy analysts have addressed the implications of an IND detonation for destination communities, they generally have focused on the immediate consequences and aftermath of an evacuation. Recent studies have established that few if any metropoli- tan regions in the United States have adequate medical, hospital, public health, triage, decontamination, emergency medical services (EMS), first responder, mass fatality management, pharmaceutical, or other critical surge capacity to deal (in the short term) with large numbers of displaced people with severe injuries, significant radiation exposure and contami- 2 See Redlener, I., Garret, Andrew, Levin, Karen, Mener, Andrew. 2010. Regional Health and Public Health Preparedness for Nuclear Terrorism: Optimizing Survival in a Low Probability/High Consequence Disaster. New York City: National Center for Disas- ter Preparedness; National Center for Disaster Preparedness. Day Three: Regional Resili- ence and Health Challenges in the Aftermath of Nuclear Terrorism 2010. Available from http://www.ncdp.mailman.columbia.edu/daythree/executive_summary.pdf; National Sec- urity Staff, Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (Second) 2010. Available from http://www.epa.gov/rpdweb00/docs/er/planning-guidance-for-response- to-nuclear-detonation-2-edition-final.pdf; Buddemeier, B.R., J.E. Valentine, K.K. Millage, and L.D. Brandt. 2011. National Capital Region Key Response Planning Factors for the Aftermath of Nuclear Terrorism. https://responder.llnl.gov/?q=home; and Lessons Learned Information Sharing. 2011. Mass Evacuation Reception Planning: Overview of Planning Issues After a Nuclear Incident. Washington, DC: FEMA.

APPENDIX G 163 nation, high level anxiety, and a wide range of acute, stress-related men- tal health conditions and overwhelming psychological trauma.3 Analysts correctly focus on these gaps in capacity and recommend long-term regional and inter-governmental planning processes and col- laborations (for example, the Regional Catastrophic Preparedness Grant Program) to fill those gaps.4 However, given the nearly 45 percent reduc- tion in federal funding for homeland security grant programs since 2010, the elimination of Regional Catastrophic Preparedness Grant Program awards after 2011, and uncertainties with respect to the consequences of consolidating 16 state and local homeland security grant programs (in- cluding Regional Catastrophic Preparedness Grant Program [RCPGP]) into the recently announced National Preparedness Grant Program, it is extremely unclear whether existing collaborative efforts will endure.5 At the same time, the fiscal year 2013 budget reflects a full one-third reduc- tion in the Hospital Preparedness Program in the office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (and a further—albeit mod- est—reduction for the Public Health Emergency Preparedness coopera- tive agreement).6 Therefore, even if efforts to prepare for an IND detonation continue at some scaled-back level within individual hospi- tals, local health departments, and collaborative venues, it may take years to bridge the identified gaps in IND response preparedness, if it can be done at all. Rather than simply recap prior recommendations concerning regional planning and collaborations, this paper approaches nuclear terrorism as if 3 These are summarized in Redlener, I., Garret, Andrew, Levin, Karen, Mener, Andrew. 2010. Regional Health and Public Health Preparedness for Nuclear Terrorism: Optimiz- ing Survival in a Low Probability/High Consequence Disaster. New York City: National Center for Disaster Preparedness. 4 FEMA’s regional offices also have collaborated with local agencies in formulating early-stage IND response plans. See FEMA Region V Newsletter 2012: Vol. 3, http://www.iesma.org/docs/FEMA%20Region%20V%20Newsletter%20%20Volume%2 03_2012.pdf, and comments from Tom Wolfe of the Arizona Division of Emergency Management, at http://www.emforum.org/vforum/111130.htm. 5 In FY2010, the total budgeted for the 16 grant programs that are being replaced by the National Preparedness Grant Program was $2.75 billion. The FY2013 executive budget request for the National Preparedness Grant Program is $1.54 billion. See Office of Man- agement and Budget. Budget of the U.S. Government FY2013: Cuts, Consolidations and Savings. Executive Office of the President 2012, p. 138, Available from http://www. whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2013/assets/ccs.pdf. 6 See Department of Health and Human Services. 2012. Public Health and Social Ser- vices Emergency Fund, FY 2013 Justification of Estimates for Appropriations Commit- tees. http://www.hhs.gov/budget/safety-emergency-budget-justification-fy2013.pdf, p. 8.

164 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK we do not have the luxury of years to plan, collaborate, and assemble a robust and fully coordinated regional response. It instead focuses on the kinds of regional public health emergency issues that leaders would have to be prepared to address as best they can if an IND detonation, followed by a massive spontaneous evacuation, occurred tomorrow. Therefore, the central focus of this paper is a scenario describing the medical and public health situation in a hypothetical county located 55 miles from ground zero, 30 days after a 10-kiloton IND has detonated and millions in the metropolitan area have evacuated the central city and immediately surrounding areas. A number of authors already have de- scribed graphically and in significant detail the potentially chaotic and deadly nature of a mass evacuation as it is unfolding, and the challenges of that initial period for local, state, and federal responders.7 The purpos- es of presenting this “Day 30” scenario are to focus on a time frame that has not yet been considered, to create a vivid image and visceral appreci- ation of how substantial and intractable the crisis is still likely to be a month after the incident, and to suggest the nature of the extraordinary challenges to be faced going forward. The scenario is based on a series of assumptions and it is recognized that changes in the underlying premises could alter the resulting Day 30 conditions in the hypothetical county. The second section reexamines some of the conventional assump- tions about how large an evacuation would be following an IND detona- tion. It also considers what relevant lessons we can learn from the 2005 evacuation of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina and the 2011 evacua- tion of the Tohoku region of Japan. The conclusion discusses some posi- tive actions state and local leaders can take to further prepare. SCENARIO Disclaimer This scenario is not a prediction. It is neither a best case nor a worst case. Rather it is a plausible sense of conditions on the ground. As such, we present it as a tool for stimulating discussion about an event that 7 Levin, Robert M., and Steve Johnston, 2011, Ventura County Nuclear Explosion Re- sponse Plan. Ventura, CA: Ventura County Department of Public Health, pp. 7–13, and Day Three: Regional Resilience and Health Challenges in the Aftermath of Nuclear Ter- rorism, 2010. Available from http://www.ncdp.mailman.columbia.edu/daythree/ executive_summary.pdf.

APPENDIX G 165 would prove to be extremely complex and in many ways, unpredictable—a vehicle for presenting and thinking about the generic issues listed in Box G-1. Nonetheless, to draw a scenario one is forced to make certain assumptions. Our most critical assumptions are that the detonation has occurred in the central city of one of America’s more populous metropolitan areas and that the detonation has prompted a spontaneous and/or managed evacuation that involved several million people. Although those assumptions are consistent with previous writings on this subject (see the section “Questions of Scale”), we acknowledge that those sources are not the final word. Different assumptions, involving fewer people and/or greater geographic dispersion by Day 30 of those who did evacuate, could produce very different outcomes. And given any set of assumptions, myriad unpredictable events and complications could change the Day 30 situation for the worse or for the better. Our focus on a county that is only an hour’s drive from the detona- tion site under normal conditions is, admittedly, arbitrary; it is meant to make the scope of this paper manageable rather than to suggest that des- tination communities closer in and further out won’t also have severe problems. There may be some unique differences in the kinds of issues that will confront smaller and more distant destination communities compared to closer and larger ones, but we believe that in most cases, the stresses will be a function of how much health care infrastructure and general response capacity the destination had to begin with, in addition to how big an increase in population it sustains due to the evacuation. Roberts County It is October 1, 30 days after a 10-kiloton improvised nuclear device exploded in midtown Major City on a weekday. Roberts County, located in the same state as Major City, is approximately 55 miles from ground zero. The area is experiencing seasonable daytime temperatures of 55 to 65 degrees and generally dry weather. With a pre-detonation population of 350,000, it now also is home to 100,000 evacuees from the Major City metropolitan area, including 25,000 children. Two-thirds of the evacuees still lack adequate temporary housing. Media images of certain areas within the county evoke an enormous refugee camp, with local resources stretched well beyond anything imaginable prior to the attack on Major City. County and local governments are operating in sustained crisis mode, with virtually all routine governmental and public and private

166 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK health care services remaining suspended or radically curtailed. To a greater or lesser extent, similar conditions are unfolding in cities and towns up to 100 miles from ground zero, located in the four states where fleeing citizens from the Major City metropolitan area ended up. Mired in their own overwhelming challenges, none of these destination commu- nities is in a position to offer mutual aid to any of the others. For the past 10 days or so, local newspapers and citizens have been referring, disparagingly, to the displaced individuals as “evacs.” Imme- diately after the catastrophe, local residents were relatively welcoming, although concerned about radiation contamination of evacuees. Now, as it is sinking in that life in Roberts County may not return to normal for months or years (if ever), the initial compassion and caring is giving way to growing anger and resentment toward the uninvited “guests.” Health authorities have not closely monitored the radiation exposure status of the evacuees. Some 500 deaths among displaced individuals have been recorded since their arrival. Many of these fatalities were due to injuries and radiation exposure from the IND. Other individuals who were unable to get needed medications or timely medical care died from heart attacks, stroke, complications of diabetes or acute asthma. Staff of local child protective service agencies are unaware that due to the cha- otic nature of the evacuation, which caused members of many families to become separated, approximately 500 of the 25,000 children that arrived in Roberts County were traveling with someone other than their parent or legal guardian. Local conditions are conducive to the degradation of water supplies, with E. coli and salmonella outbreaks out of control. The local school system, whose ranks were depleted by the exodus of 300 teachers and administrators, has been unable to accommodate the influx of evacuee children, most of whom have been out of school since June. Crime rates are extremely high and steadily rising. Financial assistance is limited for the “evacs” and part-time or temporary employment opportunities are nonexistent. Food stamps, school lunch and breakfast programs, and virtually all other public assistance programs have reached their limits in terms of resources and administrative capacity. Legislation to provide additional resources to these programs is bogged down in partisan con- gressional bickering over the extent and distribution of supplemental support for these safety net programs. Because of the direct consequences of the IND event in Major City, the entire region, including Roberts County, is experiencing widespread disruptions of telecommunications, transportation, and health and social

APPENDIX G 167 services. Workforce absenteeism from deaths, injuries, and overwhelm- ing anxiety among government personnel, responders and service pro- viders has been partly compensated for by an influx of deployed personnel from other regions and volunteers from across the nation—in addition to assistance deployments from many countries. The county’s local chapters of national emergency assistance organizations also are struggling to assist the evacuees however they can, but their resources are no match for the scale of this crisis. Many of the volunteers are al- ready exhausted from the workload, traumatized with the conditions they encounter, frustrated with lack of comfortable living arrangements, and increasingly anxious to return home to families and familiar environ- ments. In addition, due to the destruction or radiation contamination of governmental offices caused by the detonation, and widespread confu- sion at all levels of government about how the various applicable annex- es of the National Response Framework (NRF) interact with each other and with Homeland Security Presidential Directive-5 in this instance, the Unified Command envisioned in the NRF has been fully functional for only the last 10 days.8 8 This is a critical assumption of the scenario that may evoke substantive objections. However, the notion that it could take three weeks to fully establish the Unified Com- mand is reasonable in light of both recent experiences with the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and the complexity of the nominal federal response structure to an IND. Various post mortems on the federal response to the 2010 Gulf oil spill (see notes 23 and 24) identified ambiguity in (or absence of) response doctrine, absence of operational plans, confusion about officials’ roles, and other deficiencies in preparedness and execution as causes for a slow and inefficient mobilization of the federal response to the oil spill. Ac- cording to the Coast Guard’s formal internal assessment (the Incident Specific Prepared- ness Review), the National Incident Commander (NIC) organization was not established until 12 days after the well blowout, in a situation where no federal, state, or local gov- ernment personnel lost their lives, no government facilities were destroyed or compro- mised, and no transportation or telecommunications were disrupted. The functions of the National Response Team (NRT) were not fully in place for another week to ten days, and only after the NIC appointed his own Interagency Support Group to compensate for the difficulties in getting the NRT operational. Looking to the National Response Frame- work, in addition to the standard Emergency Support Function annexes, an IND detona- tion would invoke the Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex, the Catastrophic Incident Annex, the Catastrophic Incident Supplement, the Nucle- ar/Radiological Incident Annex, and the Mass Evacuation Incident Annex. HSPD-5 also appoints the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security as the “Principal Federal Official” for any major national incident. Hopefully the many experiences the federal government has had and the lessons it has learned from mobilizing responses to major natural disasters—both domestic and international—would serve it well in responding to an IND detonation. But like the 2010 gulf oil spill—which was the largest of its kind and

168 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK The federal/state Joint Field Office for the incident is based 150 miles from Major City. Senior federal emergency response officials who have deployed to the Major City area from around the United States in order to step into the shoes of the deceased and injured government offi- cials are being introduced for the first time to their federal, state, and local counterparts—people with whom they’ve never planned or exer- cised, and with whom (in most cases) they haven’t had any opportunity to develop bonds of cooperation or trust. The National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) has activated 90 percent of its DMAT, IMSURT, DMORT, and NVRT resources (consisting of approximately 4,500 per- sonnel in aggregate) and deployed them to the periphery of the moderate damage zone surrounding the detonation site, where life-saving opportu- nities are considered to be the greatest and there are numerous injuries and fatalities. The Department of Defense has activated and deployed to the Major City airport and other close-in staging most of the 9,200 fed- eral military personnel in the national “CBRN (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear) Response Enterprise.” These are soldiers with expertise in search and rescue, decontamination, emergency medi- cine, logistics, evacuation, and mortuary operations. The governor of the state in which Major City is located has de- ployed the equivalent CBRN specialist National Guard units under her command, accounting for about 800 soldiers, and in an incredible show of unity, the governors of other states have deployed a large percentage of the other 9,000 National Guard CBRN specialists to the Major City area. However, numerous command, control and coordination issues have arisen, as there never has been a military and/or National Guard exercise that tested capacity and effectiveness of such a large joint oper- ation. All of these responders—NDMS, the U.S. armed services, and the National Guard—have faced severe logistical and operational challeng- es that have hindered their ability to operate at full efficiency. Immediately after the detonation, the governor also invoked her dis- aster emergency powers under the state constitution and laws and acti- vated every available member of the state’s National Guard to be deployed among dozens of areas that, like Roberts County, are demand- ing supplemental assets to assist with newly displaced high-need evacs. After consulting with the Roberts County Commissioner (elected chief executive) and his counterparts in other destination counties, the gover- nor issued unprecedented and expansive executive orders. Those orders the first spill of national significance—an IND detonation has never happened, there is no incident specific experience base, and there would be a huge learning curve.

APPENDIX G 169 temporarily suspended many county and local (as well as state) laws and regulations under the relevant public health, environmental, corrections, criminal justice, public safety, insurance, civil service, finance and taxa- tion, and social services codes, and effectively commandeered some local government assets and some private property. Members of the gover- nor’s staff, supported by National Guard officers, are the de facto ad- ministrators of the county, dispensing and enforcing orders to implement the governor’s emergency edicts. The 7 PM curfew imposed on the county 2 weeks ago and enforced by the National Guard, will change to 6 PM next week, consistent with shorter days and the anticipation of increasing crime rates. Various parties in Roberts and other affected counties are challeng- ing the appropriateness and legality of the governor’s orders in the me- dia and state courts. However, political leaders of the state’s legislature have not objected to the governor’s sweeping assumption of emergency powers other than to state that they expect the governor to rescind those orders once the situation is stabilized. The state courts have not yet re- sponded to advocacy groups’ petitions to review the governor’s actions. Contours of the Evacuation The 100,000 evacuees still in Roberts County represent just one fourth of the total that passed through during the prior month. Those who kept going consumed large amounts of available gasoline, food, wa- ter, and over-the-counter medications along their way, creating tempo- rary shortages for county residents. During the same period, 60,000 county residents (about 17 percent of the population) fled their homes, worried about fallout and safety if throngs of Major City evacuees ar- rived.9 Among the 10,000 Roberts County residents who have not yet come home are 300 county employees (including staff of the health, pub- lic works, EMS, and police departments) and at least 200 private doc- tors, nurses and other healthcare professionals. Roughly 15,000 of the evacuees have settled in each of the county’s two primary cities, which normally have limited commuter bus service to Major City. Each city had approximately 30,000 residents and now has 45,000. The other 70,000 evacuees have clustered in a section of the county with about 200,000 residents, bounded by interstate highways 9 This is a much smaller percentage than was assumed in National Level Exercise 2010, when 50 percent of the residents of three counties outside of Indianapolis—all roughly 50 miles away but in the path of the fallout plume—attempted to evacuate.

170 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK offering access to several other mid-size cities and the innermost suburbs of Major City. Of the 75,000 adult evacuees, at least 45,000 no longer have a job or health insurance, as their former places of employment were destroyed or put indefinitely out of commission. Another 20,000 are in limbo, una- ble to get clear information about what happened to their employers or their employers’ health plans. This is not an issue for the evacuees only. Of the 30,000 Roberts County residents who commute to Major City dai- ly, approximately 3,000 died or were critically injured or permanently disabled from the results of the detonation. Most of the remaining com- muters cannot get to work because of continuing travel restrictions into and around Major City, or because their workplaces were destroyed or utterly reliant upon other businesses that did not survive. Many cannot get clear answers from anybody about whether or not their health cover- age is still in effect. All existing Roberts County health care providers and facilities are facing extraordinary financial challenges in the ab- sence of clear understandings of how and when reimbursement for ser- vices will be provided. Radiation Issues10 About 5,000 of the evacuees underwent decontamination at official mass decontamination facilities, usually several days after their exposure to fallout. Another 75,000 self-decontaminated and disposed of their evacuation clothing in the regular garbage, potentially creating unrec- ognized cross-contamination issues. The decontamination status of the remaining 20,000 evacuees is completely unknown. Few of the evacuees were screened for cumulative radiation dose in any way. However, it is estimated that at least 20,000 of the evacuees sustained cumulative doses of ionizing radiation of at least 2 Gy (200 rad). It also is unrecognized that 30 percent of the evacuees are suffering from varying degrees of immunosuppression and that wherever evacuees 10 This section is informed by DiCarlo, Andrea, Carmen Maher, and John L. Hick. 2011. Radiation Injury After a Nuclear Detonation: Medical Consequences and the Need for Scarce Resources Allocation. Disaster Management and Public Health Preparedness 5(Suppl. 1):S32–S44; by Garty, Guy, Andrew Karam, and David J. Brenner. 2011. Infra- structure to support ultra-high throughput biodosimetry screening after a radiological event. International Journal of Radiation Biology 87(8):754–765; and by Anderson, Vic- tor E. 2010. Public Health Effects of an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack, California Department of Public Health Radiologic Health Branch.

APPENDIX G 171 are located, there are atypically high levels of colds and infections. Few of the evacuees have yet received a flu shot for the upcoming winter. Roberts County has six geographically dispersed hospitals, including a 250-bed state psychiatric facility and five acute care hospitals with 1,200 beds in aggregate. Since evacuees first arrived in the county, all six of these facilities have been overwhelmed by the appearance of dis- traught, disoriented, exhausted, sometimes angry evacuees (adults and children), many with severe injuries, symptoms consistent with acute ra- diation syndrome (ARS), and/or in urgent need of medications or medi- cal devices to address chronic health issues. Many have presented with- out visible injuries, without knowledge of whether or not they have received high doses of radiation, and without personal medical records. Simultaneously, the hospitals have received substantial demands for ser- vices by residents and evacuees alike who can no longer demonstrate that they have valid health insurance. Since the detonation, the State’s health department, which regulates hospitals in the state, has insisted that the Roberts County institutions accept 250 severely injured patients who have been evacuated by air from Major City. Over the past month, thousands of evacuees have gone to county emergency rooms presenting with severe GI distress or high fevers, but have been offered little more than OTC symptomatic relief, usually with- out seeing a nurse or M.D. In the last week, 500 evacuees were admitted with symptoms of hematologic ARS. None of the hospitals has sufficient staff, blood, fluids, or pain medication to adequately provide supportive care for these patients and many will not survive. The hospitals long since have discharged everybody whom they safe- ly could release and postponed indefinitely all elective treatments. Even so, between the evacuees and the transferred patients from Major City, hospitals are all running far in excess of their approved capacity, and have implemented triage protocols and altered standards of care more radical than anything they considered or exercised in connection with planning for pandemic flu. The hospital staffs are now physically and emotionally spent. There have been 50 documented instances of evacuees threatening or actually assaulting medical staff who lacked the resources to treat them. As a result, the hospitals have state police posted continuously—both inside and outside—to manage patient access to the buildings, protect the hospital staff, and prevent severely contaminated people from entering at will. All hospitals have established “priority and

172 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK triage committees” (PTCs) to monitor acquisition, dispersal, and ac- countability for all consumable supplies, medications, and medical equipment. The PTC decisions are final—and without appeal. Current Conditions for the Evacuees After the detonation, the county’s rental vacancy rate dropped ab- ruptly from nearly 15 percent to zero, as evacuee households snapped up anything minimally habitable and bid the median monthly rent up from $1,100 to $1,700. Five hundred good Samaritans opened their homes to evacuee families, as did most of the county’s 80 houses of worship. An estimated 35,000 evacuees have found housing through these channels. The other 65,000 evacuees—including as many as 17,000 children— currently are in whatever hotels or motels they could find, or still living in their cars, in tents, in makeshift shelters, or in the open. They occupy county parks, shopping center parking lots, school athletic fields, con- servation and watershed lands, public golf courses, and any other place from which the municipal police and county sheriff officers have not for- cibly ejected them. Many have changed location night after night. Within 3 weeks of the detonation, FEMA committed to make an ex- traordinary 200,000 temporary housing units—50 percent more than for the whole Gulf Coast following Katrina—available in the Major City metropolitan area by January 1 (still 3 months away). The governor has promised the Roberts County Executive 10,000 of those units, enough for about one-third of the evacuees who have not obtained adequate tempo- rary housing or lodging. In the two primary cities, the 50 percent increase in population has been accompanied by a palpable increase of congestion, noise, and un- sanitary conditions. Many evacs ignore parking restriction, thereby im- peding access for garbage trucks, not to mention emergency vehicles and police. There are not enough tow trucks and impound lots in the county to physically remove all the illegally parked vehicles. It is far beyond the planning and resources of either city—even with help from the county and state—to provide sufficient temporary toilets, showers, refuse collec- tion, food, and water for that many additional people in just 1 month. Conditions in the makeshift settlements can only be described as primi- tive, grossly unsanitary, and highly conducive to continuing infectious disease outbreaks. A week earlier, with cooler fall weather approaching, various county and municipal public works departments, along with the state govern-

APPENDIX G 173 ment, national disaster relief organizations, volunteers, and humanitari- an assistance agencies, began a strictly local effort to construct bare- bones temporary shelters that will provide minimally adequate protect- tion from the elements, safety, and sanitation for up to another 10,000 families. The governor has redirected virtually all municipal and county employees with relevant skills from their regular tasks and ordered them to help meet this challenge. She has put on hold all government-funded construction, repair, and maintenance projects that can be deferred without imminent risk to public safety, regardless of the financial conse- quences and contractual implications of those delays. The typical issues that accompany a mass influx of spontaneous vol- unteers—coordinating their efforts, credentialing them, and ensuring that they do not inadvertently interfere with the formal incident response process—are further complicated by absence of suitable temporary hous- ing for them. Whereas in many prior domestic disasters, houses of wor- ship, private homes, and school facilities have opened their doors to volunteers, in Roberts County and the other destination communities, evacuees already have occupied those spaces. As a result, a substantial number of volunteers are compounding the health and safety issues asso- ciated with the temporary encampments. Prices have shot up dramatically at most local merchants, and peo- ple wait in line for hours, rain or shine, for tractor trailers to arrive— now with National Guard escorts—to replenish local inventories. Yet many food items, OTC medications, diapers, bottled water, soap, and hand sanitizer sell out immediately and are chronically out of stock. Hoarding is widespread. Mental Health Issues Local authorities have been reporting extraordinary needs for men- tal health support for displaced people. Acute stress disorder, withdraw- al, sleeping disorders, and depression symptoms all have been observed among both the evacuee population and the permanent residents.11 In 11 Although we have neither identified nor performed a comprehensive review or meta- analysis specifically of the literature concerning the association between evacuation and mental health, there are numerous articles addressing that issue in connection with evacu- ations following natural or technological disasters. See, for example, Bonanno, G. A.; Brewin, C. R.; Kaniasty, K.; La Greca, A. M. 2010. Weighing the Costs of Disaster: Con- sequences, Risks, and Resilience in Individuals, Families, and Communities. Psychologi- cal Science in the Public Interest 11(1):1–49; Mortensen, Karoline, Rick K. Wilson, and Vivian Ho. 2009. Physical and Mental Health Status of Hurricane Katrina Evacuees in

174 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK addition, many individuals with preexisting mental health and behavioral challenges are experiencing severe exacerbations. Yet the resources available simply to monitor such behavioral trends, much less to inter- vene, are grossly inadequate. Although NDMS teams have been deploy- ing to the Major City area as quickly as possible, federal officials so far have elected to position the great majority of the Disaster Medical Assis- tance Team (DMAT) resources as close as they can to the detonation zone, where there is the highest absolute number of survivors needing treatment. And the DMAT teams include few mental health specialists. Because several days following the detonation, the NDMS, working with the Department of Defense, has been transporting the most serious- ly injured patients out of the areas closest to ground zero. These patients have been distributed among hundreds of the hospitals that belong to the NDMS national network of more than 1,600 facilities. Overall, the sys- tem has had mixed results. Loss of medical records, refusal of many “participating” hospitals to actually accept patients, widespread prob- lems with children being separated from parents, loss of identification Houston in 2005 and 2006. Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved 20 (2):524–538; Carr, V. J., T. J. Lewin, R. A. Webster, and J. A. Kenardy. 1997. A synthe- sis of the findings from the Quake Impact Study: a two-year investigation of the psycho- social sequelae of the 1989 Newcastle earthquake. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 32(3):123–136; Jenkins, J. Lee M. D. MSc, Edbert B. Hsu M. D., M. P. H, Lauren Sauer M. B. A., Yu-Hsiang Hsieh PhD, and Thomas Kirsch D. M. D., M. P. H.. 2009. Prevalence of Unmet Health Care Needs and Description of Health Care-seeking Behavior Among Displaced People After the 2007 California Wildfires. Disaster Medi- cine & Public Health Preparedness Developing the Science of Health Care Emergency and Response 3(2):S24–S28; Ruggiero, Kenneth J., PhD, Kirstin Gros, PhD, Jenna L. McCauley, PhD, Heidi S. Resnick, PhD, Mark Morgan, Dean G. Kilpatrick, PhD, Wendy M. A. Muzzy, and Ron Acierno, PhD. 2012. Mental Health Outcomes Among Adults in Galveston and Chambers Counties After Hurricane Ike. Disaster Medicine & Public Health Preparedness 6(1):26–32; Ohta, Yasuyuki, Kenichi Araki, Naomi Kawasaki, Yoshibumi Nakane, Sumihisa Honda, and Mariko Mine. 2003. Psychological distress among evacuees of a volcanic eruption in Japan: A follow-up study. Psychiatry and Clin- ical Neurosciences 57(1):105–111; Kato, H., N. Asukai, Y. Miyaki, K. Minakawa, and A. Nishiyama. 1996. Post-traumatic symptoms among younger and elderly evacuees in the early stages following the 1995 Hanshin-Awaji earthquake in Japan. ACTA Psychiatri Scan 93:477–481; Weems, Carl F., Sarah E. Watts, Monica A. Marsee, Leslie K. Taylor, Natalie M. Costa, Melinda F. Cannon, Victor G. Carrion, and Armando A. Pina. 2007. The psychosocial impact of Hurricane Katrina: Contextual differences in psychological symptoms, social support, and discrimination. Behaviour Research and Therapy 45(10):2295–2306; and Tally, Steven, Ashley Levack, Andrew J Sarkin, Todd Gilmer, and Erik J Groessl. 2012. The Impact of the San Diego Wildfires on a General Mental Health Population Residing in Evacuation Areas. Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research 1–7.

APPENDIX G 175 for a number of infants, and other logistical problems have been major concerns that have slowed down this process. Due to the delays in establishing the Unified Command and the Joint Field Office, a Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra- tion (SAMHSA)-funded psychological first aid program executed by community-based mental health workers has been visible in the cities and towns of Roberts County for only 1 week. The governor’s executive orders temporarily waived many of the credentialing requirements for out-of-state mental health workers, but even so, the few volunteer mental health professionals now in the county cannot possibly meet the need. Many permanent residents shun the evacuees out of fear of radiation exposure. Some blame them for a perceived increase in crime and the retrenchment at the hospitals and local doctors’ offices, as well as for the 50 percent increase in rents, for gridlock on local streets, and even for the sudden crowding on the commuter buses. Of the 5,000 displaced children whose parents were able to enroll them in Roberts County schools, many are ostracized and taunted by local resident children, placing additional burdens on highly stressed school officials. Serious concerns are being expressed regarding physical confrontations between resident and evacuee adolescents. The Role of the Public Health and Safety Agencies The county’s health department, which had cut back its professional staff by 20 percent and closed three community clinics over the last 5 years, is down to a core of 130, including its mental health case workers, social workers, and clinical staff (in addition to clerical and administra- tive). Since the detonation, it has deployed in accordance with its public health emergency plans, suspending its women-infants-children and ear- ly intervention programs and all educational services other than risk communications via TV, radio, cell phones, and social media. It has scaled back nurse visits, home health care, and clinical services (includ- ing mental health) to those which are for immediate lifesaving purposes. The nursing staff is administering 20 times the normal level of teta- nus and DPT shots. The supervising engineers and technicians have de- ployed with their staffs on repeated missions to check that the improvised settlements of evacuees in parks, golf courses, and watershed lands are not compromising ground or surface water quality. The sanitarians have devoted large portions of their time to inspecting temporary shelters and settlements, as well as the opportunistic and unlicensed food and water

176 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK vendors that have materialized to serve (and, in many cases, take ad- vantage of) the evacuees. The frequency and thoroughness of inspections of existing restaurants, school and nursing home food service operations, markets, and other food distributors has suffered as a result. The department also has suspended periodic inspections of the coun- ty’s 60 mobile home parks, residential lead assessments and child lead testing, enforcement of state and county indoor nonsmoking ordinances, prenatal care services, substance abuse prevention programs, youth bu- reau services, air quality monitoring, and evaluation of new subdivisions for compliance with water supply and wastewater disposal rules (this effectively has halted new residential development in the county). The lone county epidemiologist is stretched to the breaking point, even with assistance from a state health department and a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) epidemiologist who also are helping out in three other host counties, and from a nurse with an M.P.H. and some basic epidemiological training, commandeered from a city health agency. Although 50 percent of the county’s water supply comes from local surface sources and 20 percent of its fresh food historically has been produced locally, the health department also is constrained in its ability to provide reassuring messages about food and water safety. The region- al shortage of trained technicians and lab facilities to perform the neces- sary agricultural and water radioactivity monitoring has compounded the public’s concern. Other public agencies that support public health and safety also are still in emergency mode. County and municipal public safety officials have diverted firefighting and hazmat resources to conducting impromp- tu and ad hoc inspections of risks in the temporary settlements. Sanita- tion agencies have abandoned their regularly scheduled trash collection schedules; at most homes and businesses, garbage has been picked up only twice in the more than 4 weeks since the detonation. Garbage is piling up everywhere. The 125-officer county police force and the small municipal police departments are totally overwhelmed, managing a huge increase in traf- fic on local streets and county roads and responding to an unprecedent- ed number of 911 calls. These calls have arisen from long-time residents’ fear of unfamiliar cars and people in their neighborhoods, from resi- dents’ inability to get in and out of their neighborhoods due to street ob- struction, from evacuees in physical, mental, or emotional distress, and from violent confrontations among residents and evacs who are now in

APPENDIX G 177 competition for limited local food, water, and health care. The state troopers routinely assigned to Roberts County have been diverted from most of their normal operations in order to support municipal and coun- ty law enforcement and protect the hospitals. Consequently, they devote little time to highway safety enforcement. The result is a substantial in- crease in highway accidents involving death or life-threatening injuries, and also of illegal roadside dumping of trash, human wastes, and haz- ardous materials. Not everyone in Roberts County is cooperating fully with the overall effort to accommodate the evacuees. One-quarter of the overwhelmingly volunteer EMS ambulance crews have refused to respond to dispatches to shelters or encampments housing evacs for fear of radiation contami- nation or for safety concerns. Twenty health department nurses, techni- cians, and sanitarians (about 15 percent of the professional staff) simply have refused to engage in activities that involve contact with evacuees or potentially contaminated materials. Some of the private garbage haulers who provide routine pickups under county or municipal contract have refused to service areas with a high concentration of evacuees due to fear of radiation. Three of 10 private funeral homes in the county al- ready have declined to work with families of deceased evacuees. Summary Box G-1 summarizes the key issues raised in the scenario. A month after a detonation, federal, state, and local authorities that would still be severely handicapped by the difficulty of accessing the detonation site should at least have acquired a consistent and fairly clear situational awareness and established all the essential elements of the response command structure required by the National Response Framework. They also should have begun to understand the scale of the disruption and de- struction at ground zero and the magnitude of population movement in reaction to the incident. However, the situation in destination localities is likely to still be extraordinarily dire and, because of wide and dynamic population disper- sion, difficult to assess. An additional concern, for an unpredictable period of time following the IND detonation, will remain with respect to the possibility of a sec- ondary follow-up incident in another target zone. At the federal level, it is conceivable that some response assets will be reserved for such a sce-

178 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK nario until it can be determined that another IND detonation or other ma- jor terrorism event is not likely. In any case, uncertainty and caution re- sulting in asset and resource readiness may put a finite limit, even if temporarily, on deployment for the original event. BOX G-1 Key Issues 1 Month After Detonation Competition for federal and regional response resources: Even with deploy- ment of unprecedented high levels of outside personnel and resources, communities hosting evacuees may have to compete for attention with the detonation city; potential for delayed federal response overall. Loss of jobs, income, schools, health care, and other basics of daily life: An issue primarily among evacuees, but destination residents will not be exempt. Beyond basic shelter, households that have lost everything will need food, water, trans- portation, schools, and myriad other services to get back on their feet. Mental health: Unprecedented incidence of acute stress disorder, withdraw- al, sleeping disorders, and depression symptoms without resources to ser- vice those needs; preexisting mental health and behavioral challenges severely exacerbated; limited mental health resources of National Disaster Medical System and delayed deployment of community-based psychological first aid program. Overwhelmed local medical and public health systems: Deferral of elective and non-urgent procedures; diminution of response capacity due to evacuation from destination county and unwillingness to report to work; physical security require- ments for hospitals and health professionals; limited potential for mutual aid as- sistance; loss of health insurance by evacuees and residences/loss of payment for health services provided; overworked and demoralized personnel; severe tri- age and altered standards of care in effect. Public safety: Evacuee cars obstruct Emergency Management Services (EMS), police and fire service; state police neglect routine highway safety patrols; local law enforcement diverted from public safety responding to evacuee-related 911 calls. Radiation: Inadequate knowledge of evacuees’ radiation status (both decontam- ination and total radiation dose sustained); latent acute radiation syndrome cou- pled with lack of resources to provide supportive care; high rate of immunosuppression and infections among evacuees; lack of information about fallout contamination of water supplies and local agricultural products; cross- contamination due to discarded clothing. Sanitation: Uncollected garbage in built-up areas; insufficient sanitary facilities in makeshift, spontaneous evacuee encampments; roadside dumping of hazard-

APPENDIX G 179 ous materials and human wastes; deferred inspection of restaurants, food mar- kets, institutional food services; appearance of unlicensed and unsupervised op- portunistic food and water vendors; insufficient mass fatality management to arrange proper temporary interment. Shelter: Potential for high incidence of heat exhaustion, hypothermia, and other exposure-related morbidity and mortality; rapid absorption of temporary housing opportunities; abrupt rental housing inflation; competition for hous- ing among evacuees, volunteers, and relief workers. Social problems: Discrimination against/antagonism toward evacuees; some lo- cal service providers “redline” evacuees; evacuees blamed for increased crime rates, higher prices and shortages, “ruining” the community; competition among evacuees and permanent residents for goods and services; taunting, shunning, stigmatizing, and avoidance of evacuees; violence between evacuees and per- manent residents. Vulnerable populations: Children separated from their families/guardians during the evacuation, children with special health care needs, adults with disabilities or chronic medical and mental health conditions, frail elderly, and other identifiable segments of the evacuee population in need of additional attention and re- sources. Water safety: Evacuee encampments in watershed lands; possible contamina- tion of public water supplies with infectious agents due to inadequate sanitation; possible radiation contamination from fallout. Suspension and curtailment of routine state and local government public health and safety functions. UNCERTAINTIES RELATED TO AN IND-PROMPTED EVACUATION Questions of Scale Many believe that following an IND detonation, there likely would be a large and spontaneous self-evacuation from both the targeted city and its suburbs. For example, in the National Level Exercise 2010 Op- erations Based Exercise, built around the hypothetical detonation of a 10- kiloton nuclear device in downtown Indianapolis, the scenario included 270,000 people evacuating the city (about 30 percent of the total popula- tion), 200,000 of their own volition. The scenario also reflected the self- evacuation of nearly 50 percent of the residents of three counties located

180 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK 40–60 miles northeast of the city, which were sitting in the path of the approaching fallout plume. Generally speaking, the driving factors behind such an evacuation would include the public’s feelings of insecurity that the United States had been attacked again, worry that a second or third detonation could occur, fear of radiation, lack of awareness of the relative risks of moving vs. staying put, loss of workplace and income, short-term failures of elec- tronic communications media, poorly conceived risk communication strategies and messages, and—for at least some portion of the population—lack of confidence in government to give trustworthy in- formation and advice about the safest options. The scale of such an evacuation could be huge. An expert who par- ticipated in the earlier Institute of Medicine (IOM) workshop estimated that “more than a million would be displaced by lingering radiation.”12 The Department of Homeland Security’s March 2010 “Strategy for Im- proving the National Response and Recovery from an IND Attack” says that the number of evacuees potentially could be in the millions.13 Ventu- ra County’s Nuclear Explosion Response Plan rests upon a working as- sumption that at least 2 million residents of Los Angeles County (about 20 percent of the total population) would evacuate to the north following a detonation in downtown Los Angeles.14 Based upon their review of the literature concerning the evacuation from the Three Mile Island nuclear power accident and from major U.S. hurricanes, researchers at the Uni- versity of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center argued that fol- lowing an IND detonation in Manhattan, more than 7 million people might flee in all directions and at least half of those evacuees would set- tle in communities more than 150 miles away from ground zero.15 These are highly informed and well-educated guesses; however, there is no accepted methodology for estimating either the magnitude or direc- tionality of a mass evacuation following an IND detonation. Therefore, it 12 Benjamin, 2009. Assessing Medical Preparedness, p. 73. quotes James Blumenstock of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials. 13 DHS Strategy for Improving the National Response and Recovery from an IND At- tack. 2010. Washington, DC: Department of Homeland Security, p. A-11. 14 Ventura County Department of Public Health. 9. FEMA features this plan prominent- ly in Lessons Learned Information Sharing. 2011, pp. 12–14. 15 Meit, Michael, Redlener, Irwin, Briggs, Thomas W., Kwanisai, Mike, Culp, Derrin, Abramson, David. 2011. Rural and Suburban Population Surge Following Detonation of an Improvised Nuclear Device: A New Model to Estimate Impact. Disaster Medicine & Public Health Preparedness 5:S146.

APPENDIX G 181 is worth reexamining some of the basic assumptions that lead many to conclude that any evacuation necessarily would involve millions. Leaders’ Ability to Manage Scale and Direction Many challenges would emerge regarding effective and informed leadership needed to oversee the state and local response to an unprece- dented catastrophe. For example, would mayors or governors have ac- cess in real time to both high-quality modeling and analysis of a fallout plume, and expert scientific advice to help them interpret these data? Would these officials have immediate access to all the necessary subject- matter experts, and would they have enough history with them to be con- fident in relying upon their judgment? Such analysis and advice should, ideally, play a critical role in any governor’s decisions to pursue an evacuation, sheltering-in-place, or hybrid response strategy. Would the telecommunications infrastructure, upon which a governor or mayor would rely to receive and disseminate information and instructions to the public, survive the blast, fires, and electromagnetic pulse created by the detonation? Would there be critical delays in pushing out time-sensitive messages? Would officials receive accurate information as to which messages had been pushed out and which had not? Another question, barely recognized in discussions of a potential evacuation, is whether governors have emergency powers and law en- forcement resources sufficient to suppress a mass evacuation or at least manage it if they believe that would be in the public interest. The governor of New York State, for example, has broad emergency powers that ena- ble the governor, with minimal constraints, to “temporarily suspend spe- cific provisions of any statute, local law, ordinance, or orders, rules or regulations, or parts thereof, of any agency during a state disaster emer- gency, if compliance with such provisions would prevent, hinder, or de- lay action necessary to cope with the disaster.”16 The governor may also “alter or modify” the requirements of any provision of law suspended. Would this authority enable the governor to prevent a mass exodus from New York City by closing down the bridges connecting four of the city’s five boroughs—home to 85 percent of the city’s entire population—to the mainland? While the governor clearly could employ National Guard 16 N.Y. EXC. LAW § 29-a: NY Code - Section 29-A: Suspension of other laws.

182 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK troops for that purpose, would this broad authority allow her or him to commandeer county or local police officers and vehicles if necessary? Do the governors of California, Illinois, Texas, and other states con- taining major cities that are potential targets of nuclear terrorism have equivalent broad powers that would enable them to intervene at transpor- tation choke points and to muster law enforcement above and beyond their state national guard? There is not a readily available national inven- tory of governors’ emergency powers and their legal ability to manage an evacuation. The National Governors Association (NGA) publication enti- tled “A Governor’s Guide to Homeland Security” indicates that in some states, gubernatorial emergency powers include “suspending state regula- tions and statutes; commandeering the use of private property; rationing food, water and fuel; and authorizing emergency funds without prior leg- islative consent.” The NGA, however, has not codified these.17 The mere existence of legal authority to manage an evacuation begs the critical political question: Even in an unprecedented crisis such as an IND detonation, would any governor be willing to assume such extraor- dinary powers and to make decisions of this magnitude, potentially influ- encing the long-term health and possibly even the survival, of hundreds of thousands? Or would governors be unwilling to impinge on personal liberty in such a consequential way? Regardless of whether gubernatorial discretion would ever function to constrain the scale of an evacuation, sympathetic evacuations could arise in other major cities among citizens fearing a second or third terror- ist detonation. It is not likely that a sympathetic evacuation would head in the direction of the first detonation, but it could interfere with the transportation of relief workers, temporary hospitals and mortuaries, crit- ical medical stockpiles, and other resources needed in the vicinity of the first detonation. It also could compound economic and social disruption in ways that would have unpredictable cascading effects and implications for the destination communities surrounding the original detonation. Finally, the role of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in evacuation-related decisions is not discussed in any publicly available Department of Homeland Security (DHS) or Federal Emergency Man- agement Agency (FEMA) documents. An IND detonation would be treat- ed as a terrorist event. Therefore, under the National Response Framework, the FBI would have a prominent—maybe even a controlling—role in the 17 National Governors Association. 2007. A Governor’s Guide to Homeland Security. http://www.emd.wa.gov/grants/documents/03-15-07-govs-guide.pdf, pp. 14–15, and Author email exchange with Thomas Maclellan, National Governors Association.

APPENDIX G 183 short-term response related to its criminal investigation.18 We have not found anything in the public domain that illuminates how the FBI’s con- trol of a post-detonation criminal investigation might impinge on a gov- ernor’s or the Department of Homeland Security’s ability to support and manage a controlled evacuation. Nature of Complex Public Health Emergencies: Are There Lessons from Evacuations Following Katrina and the Great East Japan Earthquake? Even if we accept the consensus view than an IND-prompted evac- uation would be immense in scale, recent mass evacuations offer few insights as to the public health implications of an IND-spurred mass evacuation for destination communities. Estimates of number of people who evacuated the Tohoku region of Japan in response to the March 2011 tsunami and nuclear power plant accident vary considerably, with the highest official estimate to date being approximately 350,000.19 Although even the high-end estimate appears quite small compared to what one might expect following an urban IND detonation in the United States, it still represents a massive movement of people that potentially could overwhelm destination communities. Although U.S. media and Japanese newspapers with English editions have reported extensively on the travails of the evacuees and the indignities they have faced, journal- ists have barely documented the evacuees’ ultimate destinations within Japan, or how their arrival impacted the host cities.20 One also must be cautious in making inferences from the well- documented 2005 resettlement of Hurricane Katrina evacuees in Houston/Harris County and in Baton Rouge, the two cities that hosted the greatest number of people. The evidence from the Katrina evacuation is not a strong model for how suburban and exurban cities and counties outside a major U.S. city might respond to a 30 to 50 percent population 18 The FBI’s role derives from Homeland Security Presidential Directive-5 and is de- fined in the National Response Framework’s “Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex.” 19 Government of Japan. 2012. Road to Recovery. Tokyo, Japan: Reconstruction Agen- cy, p. 3, http://www.kantei.go.jp/foreign/policy/documents/2012/__icsFiles/afieldfile/20 12/03/07/road_to_recovery.pdf. 20 See, for example, Voices of Fukushima’s Evacuees. Available from http://www.ny times.com/interactive/2011/12/06/world/asia/Voices-of-Fukushima-Evacuees.html?_r=0.

184 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK increase such as postulated in the scenario of fictional Roberts County and its two primary cities. The evacuation of New Orleans abruptly added as many as 250,000 people to Houston/Harris County (with a 2005 population of roughly 2.0/3.9 million) and as many as 235,000 people to Baton Rouge (2005 population of about 415,000).21 Between one-half and two-thirds of the evacuees left those host cities within about a year. In neither city was there evidence of what one might describe as a public health emergency or a massive retrenchment of basic public health services, in spite of such large and abrupt increases in population. Certainly, there is no evidence that major disease outbreaks occurred in either metropolitan area after the arrival of the Katrina evacuees. The Houston/Harris County metro- politan area was able to absorb 150,000 to 250,000 people without hav- ing to house tens of thousands of them in sprawling tent cities or communities of FEMA-provided temporary units, whereas much smaller Baton Rouge had a much harder time integrating the evacuees into the private housing market. Some residents of the host cities blamed and resented the evacuees for increasing crime, creating illegal overcrowding of apartments, com- peting for already scarce public services, bidding up rents, and increasing traffic congestion. Local and state officials lamented the fiscal burden of being good Samaritans and what they perceived as a never-ending strug- gle to receive reimbursement from the U.S. government. However, the only health issue that persistently appears in discussions of the Katrina evacuees in Houston and Baton Rouge is the particularly intense burden on the local mental health and substance abuse prevention and treatment systems, perceived as overtaxed long before Katrina sent a flood of new clients into those two cities.22 21 For various estimates of the number of Katrina evacuees who arrived and remained in these two cities after one year, see Dyer, Scott. 2006. Overflow City. Planning 72(4):28–31; Chamlee-Wright, Emily, and Daniel M. Rothschild. 2008. Hosting a Disas- ter: Tips for Host Cities. Mercatus on Policy 23, p. 1; Axtman, Kris. 2006. With bulk of Katrina evacuees, Texans begin to feel burden. The Christian Science Monitor, August 22; Sallee, Rad. 2007. County to get $20 million for Aiding Evacuees. The Houston Chronicle, November 7. 22 Excellent sources of these perspectives include the testimony of nine witnesses at U.S. Senate 2007. Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. Host Communities: Analyzing the Role and Needs of Communities that Take in Disaster Evac- uees in the Wake of Major Disasters and Catastrophes. December 3; Perry, Rick, and Michael Williams. 2006. Texas Rebounds: Helping our Communities and Neighbors Recover from Hurricanes Rita and Katrina. http://www.governor.state.tx.us/files/press- office/Texas-Rebounds.pdf; http://www.hsgac.senate.gov/hearings/host-communities-

APPENDIX G 185 The evidence from Houston and Baton Rouge is more relevant to thinking about a mass migration to a largely independent and unaffected metropolitan area (for example, several hundred thousand IND evacuees from New York settling in Philadelphia or in Boston) than to speculating about the potential impacts in the suburban or exurban portions of an extended metropolitan area where the entire physical, economic, social, and psychological equilibrium has been totally upended by a nuclear explosion. Furthermore, within most major metropolitan areas, the central city is home to a disproportionate population of people who are socially mar- ginalized, undocumented, uninsured, medically vulnerable, disabled or impaired, addicted, or homeless, who often exhibit complex arrays of these attributes, and who require a high level of support services. Typi- cally, the primary city also provides a significantly greater support sys- tem for these populations than exists in the suburbs or exurbs. This urban “safety net” consists of well-established networks of governmental and nonprofit service providers, affinity groups, and advocates. If an IND incident destroyed or disrupted this safety net and displaced this popula- tion to the suburbs and exurbs, their issues and needs would place excep- tional burdens on local public health systems and private medical and social service providers that might lack the required expertise and be un- accustomed to dealing with these problems in such volume. CONCLUSION Public Health Priorities In the scenario presented in this paper, a month after an IND detona- tion in an American city, the social and functional fabric of society—at least in the region where the detonation occurred—would still be stretched to limits never tested before. The response would challenge the resourcefulness, the creativity, the heroism, the compassion, and the en- analyzing-the-role-and-needs-of-communities-that-take-in-disaster-evacuees-in-the-wake- of-major-disasters-a disasters-and-catastrophes; Feldman, Claudia. 2006. Overburdened Long Before Katrina, the Public Mental Health Network Here Is Finding It Impossible to Meet Need. Houston Chronicle, August 20; Markley, Melanie. 2007. Making Therapy Free for Those in Need; Pro bono Push Began as Katrina Evacuees Arrived. The Houston Chronicle, February 4; Nichols, Bruce. 2006. Houston Wearying of Katrina Evacuees: Survey Shows Stresses from Absorbing 150,000 from Storm. The Dallas Morning News, April 15.

186 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK durance of all levels of government and all sectors of society in ways no previous disaster had. Leaders would need to take a long view and think about how society ultimately could stabilize and regain a sense of security and normalcy. In the near term, however, leaders—particularly those responsible for public health—would need to focus on preventing the detonation from having massive morbidity and mortality ripple effects throughout the region. Amidst dozens, maybe hundreds of worthy possible objec- tives, their highest near-term priorities would be to shelter evacuees from the elements; establish the most basic sanitation and hygiene so as to minimize the chances of infectious disease outbreaks; protect the safety of food and water; provide psychological first aid and some level of clin- ical mental health services to a disoriented and traumatized population of evacuees; and establish emergency protocols (in terms of triage and altered standards of care) for the allocation of scarce health care and medical resources. What If It Happened Tomorrow? If the “unthinkable” were to occur tomorrow, leaders from all sectors would have no choice but to leap into the breach, notwithstanding the absence of comprehensive, collaboratively developed multisector plans and response mechanisms. What advice can we offer about such an eventuality? First, several postmortems on the governmental responses to the 2010 Gulf Coast oil spill indicate that upon the occurrence of a major disaster, the public rapidly will demand a clear response leader, someone to whom they can look for information and reassurance, and someone whom they can hold accountable.23 Those studies also concluded that governors will establish themselves as a leading public face and voice of the response, even to the extent of taking significant actions outside the 23 U.S. Coast Guard. 2011. BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: Incident Specific Prepar- edness Review. http://www.uscg.mil/foia/docs/dwh/bpdwh.pdf, p. 60; and Allen, Thad W. 2010. National Incident Commander’s Report: MC252 Deepwater Horizon. http://www.nrt.org/production/NRT/NRTWeb.nsf/AllAttachmentsByTitle/SA-1065NIC Report/$File/Binder1.pdf, p. 12.

APPENDIX G 187 formal joint response command structure or selectively opposing or complicating decisions of the formal command structure.24 These findings, coupled with the fact that some governors have sub- stantially greater emergency powers than any has yet exercised, strongly suggest that future efforts to prepare for nuclear terrorism should include another element besides traditional planning and regional collaborations. Such efforts also should prepare governors to be ready to take extraordi- nary, unprecedented action if their state constitutions and statutes allow. Governors should understand as fully as possible the potential applica- tions of their emergency powers in response to an IND detonation, even if political considerations ultimately might constrain how governors used those powers. Second, the Coast Guard’s internal evaluation of the federal response to the oil spill noted that “superb crisis leadership is essential for effec- tive response to a major national domestic incident” and that “the charac- teristics necessary for crisis leadership are well documented and identifiable.”25 Consequently, the report recommended significant addi- tional investment in how the Coast Guard identifies, trains, and cultivates officers to be future crisis managers. That report also noted that “many federal, state, and local officials and industry executives do not have crisis leadership experience and training or are not temperamentally suited to the role of crisis manag- er.”26 Governors and other elected officials who are ex officio crisis man- agers may or may not have “the right stuff” for that role. The same may be true with respect to members of a governor’s cabinet, even if they are superb administrators and have outstanding political skills. Given the critical role these officials would have to play in responding to an IND detonation and the sheer unpredictability of how such an incident would unfold, they should have real-time access to highly trained and certified crisis managers to advise them—tested individuals who meet the highest crisis leadership standards of U.S. military or federal civilian agencies. 24 National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. Deepwater: The Gulf Oil Disaster and the Future of Offshore Drilling. Report to the President, 2011, http://www.oilspillcommission.gov/sites/default/files/documents/DEEPWATER_Report tothePresident_FINAL.pdf, pp. 138-139, 265; Coast Guard 2011, Incident Specific Pre- paredness Review, pp. 75-79, and Allen 2010, National Incident Commander's Report, p. 17. 25 Coast Guard 2011, Incident Specific Preparedness Review, p. 60. 26 Ibid.

188 NATIONWIDE RESPONSE ISSUES AFTER AN IND ATTACK Where to Begin? Even though a low-yield IND detonation is 1 of the 15 national dis- aster planning scenarios developed by the federal government, planning for such an event may be one of the most difficult and complex challeng- es any leader could ever undertake. Understandably, many emergency response professionals and public officials hesitate to contemplate, much less confront, the challenges of an event as improbable and horrific as nuclear terrorism. The scale and scope of the effort and resources re- quired to respond to an IND detonation remain largely beyond the capac- ity that exists in any local jurisdiction or region. However, serious discussion and planning on a local and regional level is critically important. That is why programs such as the Regional Catastrophic Preparedness Grant Program were necessary—and why dis- continuation of those initiatives is troubling. Even though the likelihood of nuclear terrorism is believed to be small, the probability is not zero— and the consequences would be extremely high. Moreover, we must re- call that the ferocity and complexity of the attacks of 9/11 seemed unim- aginable at the time; similar perceptions of improbability must not paralyze planning and preparation to react to a nuclear event. As long as we think it possible that an IND detonation and related evacuation could occur at any time—that we may not have the luxury of years and years to devise optimal plans—dialogue must continue and focus on straightfor- ward consensus and best practices. This is especially true as recent stud- ies have clearly shown that proper information and planning could make a substantial difference in lives saved. So, where to begin? Elected officials with responsibility for public safety could initiate high-level discussions of post-IND scenarios (such as the one presented in this paper) with leaders in health, public health, housing, law enforce- ment, sanitation, and so on. Participants would be encouraged to think creatively and broadly—well outside their own areas of expertise and their professional silos—about the issues raised. New ideas or elaboration of cascading consequences would likely emerge from such discussions. Important questions might include x What would actually happen in our county or state? x What are our critical resources and unique risks? x What assets must be protected and deployed?

APPENDIX G 189 x How would we stay in touch with officials from outside the ju- risdiction? x How would we handle hostilities that might arise between local citizens and evacuees? Such discussions would be held intermittently, over time, giving partici- pants the opportunity to really think about what might happen, what would be needed, and what they could do, individually and collectively. From the outset, many functional ideas and different, useful perspectives would emerge. For example, perhaps someone will think that guidelines for interacting with displaced persons would be helpful. Or that psycho- logical first aid training should be provided for responders, local leaders, clergy, and interested citizens. On their own, such discussions will not ensure sufficient supplies, hospital beds, or classroom space for evacuees. Guided by thoughtful leadership, however, a level of serious forethought will help create an environment in which citizens are mentally prepared and have far better capacity to respond to and recover from the unprecedented conditions that would inevitably unfold after a detonation of an IND.

Next: Appendix H: Implications of an Improvised Nuclear Device Detonation on Command and Control for Surrounding Regions at the Local, State, and Federal Levels »
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Our nation faces the distinct possibility of a catastrophic terrorist attack using an improvised nuclear device (IND), according to international and U.S. intelligence. Detonation of an IND in a major U.S. city would result in tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of victims and would overwhelm public health, emergency response, and health care systems, not to mention creating unprecedented social and economic challenges. While preparing for an IND may seem futile at first glance, thousands of lives can be saved by informed planning and decision making prior to and following an attack.

In 2009, the Institute of Medicine published the proceedings of a workshop assessing the health and medical preparedness for responding to an IND detonation. Since that time, multiple federal and other publications have added layers of detail to this conceptual framework, resulting in a significant body of literature and guidance. However, there has been only limited planning effort at the local level as much of the federal guidance has not been translated into action for states, cities and counties. According to an informal survey of community preparedness by the National Association of City and County Health Officials (NACCHO), planning for a radiation incident ranked lowest in priority among other hazards by 2,800 local health departments.

The focus of Nationwide Response Issues After an Improvised Nuclear Device Attack: Medical and Public Health Considerations for Neighboring Jurisdictions: Workshop Summary is on key response requirements faced by public health and health care systems in response to an IND detonation, especially those planning needs of outlying state and local jurisdictions from the detonation site. The specific meeting objectives were as follows:

- Understand the differences between types of radiation incidents and implications of an IND attack on outlying communities.

-Highlight current planning efforts at the federal, state, and local level as well as challenges to the implementation of operational plans.

-Examine gaps in planning efforts and possible challenges and solutions.

-Identify considerations for public health reception centers: how public health and health care interface with functions and staffing and how radiological assessments and triage be handled.

-Discuss the possibilities and benefits of integration of disaster transport systems.

-Explore roles of regional health care coalitions in coordination of health care response.

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