Terrorist Bombing Case Studies - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 69
About This Presentation
Title:

Terrorist Bombing Case Studies

Description:

Beware becoming a 'Boiled Frog' Bottlenecks. Patient reception. Triage ... Plans must be robust (boiled frog) Communications must be robust. Drills are vital ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:263
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 70
Provided by: robertf6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Terrorist Bombing Case Studies


1
Terrorist Bombing Case Studies
  • Robert Feldman, MD FAAEM
  • Cook County Bureau of Health Services

2
Scenarios
  • Pipe Bomb
  • Suicide Bomber
  • Vehicle Bomb
  • Combined attack
  • NBC

3
Centennial Park Bombing
4
27 July 1996
  • 055 There is a bomb in Centennial Park. You
    have 30 minutes.
  • Knapsack found, moved
  • People evacuated in an orderly fashion
  • 0125 Bomb detonates

5
Centennial Park Bombing
6
Centennial Park Bombing
7
Bomb Scene
8
Centennial Park - Device
9
Centennial Park Bombing
Eric Rudolph
Richard Jewell
10
Centennial Park Bombing
  • Victims
  • Injuries
  • Hospitals

Feliciano et al, Am J Surg 1998176538-43.
11
Victims
  • 111 victims ( 1 MI)
  • 96 evacuated within 30 minutes to 4 nearby
    hospitals
  • All patients evacuated within 32 minutes by 30
    EMS units
  • No formal triage at park

12
Hospitals
  • Level I Trauma Center
  • Grady Memorial
  • 3 Urban Community Hospitals
  • Crawford Long
  • Piedmont
  • Georgia Baptist
  • Outlying facilities

13
Injuries
  • Of the 96 patients evacuated to the 4 downtown
    hospitals
  • 24 (25) required admission
  • If there had been more casualties, the
    over-triage to the closest hospitals would have
    been problematic

14
Injuries
  • All injuries were due to shrapnel (secondary)
  • No primary or tertiary injuries

15
Incident Features -Pre-Detonation
  • 5 years of planning
  • Pre-positioning of resources for Olympic events
  • Prior warning
  • Partial evacuation
  • Repositioning of device

16
Incident Features - Post-Detonation
  • Adequate resources quickly on-scene
  • Rapid evacuation of victims (32 min)
  • Excellent communications
  • Surgeons in ER before patients
  • Overstaffing
  • More physicians than patients in Grady ER

17
Incident Features - Post-Detonation
  • No blast injuries or burns
  • Only 1 direct fatality

Alice Hawthorne, 44
18
Chicago Tribune - 18 April 2005
19
Park Hotel - Netanya, IsraelMarch 22, 2002
  • Enclosed hotel banquet hall
  • 250 people attending Passover seder
  • Many elderly
  • Doors windows closed

20
Suicide Bomb - 1930
  • Charge 8-10kg triacetone triperoxide (TATP)
  • Embedded with several hundred steel balls (3-7 mm)

21
TATP 2g
22
Blast Effects - Confined Space
23
Suicide Bomb - Victims
  • 250 people in hotel dining room
  • 164 victims
  • 73 PTSD only (44 of victims)
  • 91 bodily injury (56 of victims)
  • Mean age 65
  • 20 dead at scene (22 of injured)
  • 71 alive on arrival at hospitals (78 of injured)

24
  • Blast site
  • Dead at scene
  • DOA
  • In-hospital death

25
Suicide Bomb - Victims
  • 71 alive on arrival at hospitals
  • 2 Level II trauma, 1 community
  • 2 Triage hospitals (1 Level II the community
    hospital)
  • 10 died in hospital (2 during initial resus)
  • 23 required transfer to Level I trauma center

26
Suicide bomb - Injury patterns
  • Deceased
  • Averaged over 16 pellets
  • 90 had head injuries
  • 1 traumatic limb amputation

Reuters
27
Suicide bomb - Injury patterns
  • Early deaths in-hospital (2)
  • Penetrating chest injuries
  • Diaphragm penetration ? Intra-abdominal injuries
  • Death by exsanguination

28
Suicide bomb - Injury patterns
  • Other wounded (69)
  • All severely wounded had penetrating wounds
  • 10 minor burns
  • 2 major burns (gt30) ? both died
  • 3 had blast injury as well as penetrating trauma
  • 18 required early intubation

29
Suicide bomb - Injury patterns
  • Other wounded (69)
  • 23 (33) to OR
  • 10 laparatomies
  • 4 thoracotomies
  • 3 craniotomies
  • 5 orthopedic
  • 2 vascular

30
Suicide bomb - Injury patterns
  • Injury pattern summary
  • Immediate mortality 22
  • Severe injuries 45
  • In-hospital mortality 14

31
Netanya - Lessons Learned
  • Blast injury especially evident in immediate
    fatalities
  • Severely injured patients suffered hemorrhage
    from blast and shrapnel
  • Isolated shrapnel wounds similar to shotgun
    wounds
  • Rapid loss of velocity and tissue penetration
    with distance

32
Netanya - Lessons Learned
  • Entrance wounds often small
  • Often no exit wound
  • Maintain a high index of suspicion for shrapnel
    injuries!

33
Netanya - Lessons Learned
  • Wound evaluation
  • Stable - CT
  • Unstable - whole-body fluoroscopy in OR
  • FAST scans helpful
  • Do not rule out GI injuries
  • DPL

34
Netanya - Incident Characteristics
  • Confined space
  • Indoors
  • Sunken area
  • Shrapnel
  • No structural collapse
  • No crush injuries

35
Netanya hotel victims
Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
36
Oklahoma City - 19 April 1995
37
OKC
  • 0902 Approx. 4000 lbs. ANFO detonates on north
    side of Murrah Federal Building
  • 6.0 on Richter scale
  • Heard felt 55 mi. away

38
Engineering Analysis, Inc.
39
OKC
  • 324 buildings damaged
  • 10 collapsed
  • 14 others condemned

40
OKC Bomb Effects
Dallas Morning News
41
OKC - Commuications
  • Over 1800 calls to 911 within 1st hour
  • Incoming call volume overwhelmed switchboards,
    blocking outgoing calls
  • Cell phone service overwhelmed
  • 27 additional bomb threats that day
  • Secondary device scare 1030
  • EMS couldnt contact hospitals to assess capacity

42
OKC
  • Over 22,000 FBI scene IDs issued
  • Media counterfeited all IDs, until dot-a-day
    instituted

43
OKC
  • 168 dead
  • 163 in Murrah building
  • 19 children
  • 2 neighboring buildings
  • 1 outside
  • 1 rescuer
  • 790 injured

44
OKC
  • Blast effects
  • Building collapse

45
OKC
  • Victims transported by EMS, police, private
    vehicles
  • Local hospital staff walked to scene
  • One nurse was killed by falling debris

46
OKC - Injuries
  • Local hospitals 426
  • Admitted 82
  • Treated released 344
  • Private doctors offices 175

47
OKC - Injuries
48
Impact of Building Collapse
Frykberg, J Trauma 200253201-12.
49
OKC - Hazards to Rescuers
  • Rescue personnel did not use PPE
  • Inhalation hazards
  • Similar experience at WTC
  • Safe perimeters not established initially
  • Volunteer nurse killed by falling debris
  • Several others injured due to lack of appropriate
    safety equipment

50
OKC - Mental Health
  • 19 children killed
  • 30 children orphaned
  • 219 children lost one parent
  • 462 left homeless
  • 18,613 people sought counseling by years end

51
(No Transcript)
52
OKC - Lessons Learned
  • Key emergency personnel had recently attended
    training in large-scale disaster management
  • Interagency communications are crucial
  • Unified command center and structure
  • External resources were required
  • Youre on your own for 72 hours

53
OKC Lessons -
  • No defense to an ambush
  • You must have plans
  • Practice your plans
  • Take care of your staff
  • Dont think it cant happen to you
  • 750 in materials
  • 1 billion damage

54
OKC - Post-detonation
55
Summary Review
  • Outdoor detonation
  • Indoor detonation
  • Large vehicle bomb

Frykberg, J Trauma 200253201-12
56
Outdoor vs. Confined Space
  • Limits primary (blasts) and tertiary (victim
    thrown)
  • Leibovici et al (J Trauma 1996411030-5)
  • Jerusalem bombings
  • Open-air 7.8 mortality (16/204 casualties)
  • Buses 49 mortality (46/93 victims)

57
Summary - Triage
  • Mass-casualty incident (MCI) vs.
  • Disaster

58
Triage - MCI
  • Medical resources not overwhelmed
  • Over-triage to closest hospitals and trauma
    centers can be tolerated

59
Triage - Disaster
  • On-scene triage is essential
  • Over-triage problematic
  • Overwhelms facilities
  • Delays care for critical patients

60
Overtriage vs. Mortality
  • Correlation is not causality
  • Overtriage will be more prevalent if incident is
    more severe
  • Goal is for 50 overtriage, but 75 is common

61
Overtriage vs. Mortality
  • Must be willing able to redistribute patients
    if facility is overwhelmed
  • Must be able to recognize when facility is
    overwhelmed

62
Disasters Beware becoming a Boiled Frog
63
Bottlenecks
  • Patient reception
  • Triage
  • Imaging
  • Laboratories

64
Safety
  • Bomber may be a victim
  • Unexploded ordnance
  • Secondary devices
  • Dust / inhalation hazards
  • NBC contaminants

65
Terror-ism
  • Plan location for psych casualties
  • Patient information
  • Families
  • Media

66
Responder Stress Illness
  • Critical Incident Stress Debriefing
  • No evidence for efficacy, may be harmful
  • PTSD
  • OKC - 13 of firefighters
  • May affect counselors as well
  • Substance Abuse
  • Self-medication
  • FDNY cases doubled 2003 to 2004

67
Responder Stress Illness
  • Get staff back to work
  • Watch for signs of PTSD
  • Avoid stigmatizing PTSD victims

68
NBC
  • Contaminating agents will greatly multiply
    psychological effect on patients, public, and
    STAFF
  • Plan should include screening for ionizing
    radiation

69
Prepare!
  • Plans without practice - little value
  • Plans must be robust (boiled frog)
  • Communications must be robust
  • Drills are vital
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com