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1. ProtectingEmergency Responders:Lessons LearnedFrom Terrorist Attacks
2. Today's Focus About the NIOSH/RAND Conference
Characteristics of the Responses
Lessons Learned
Responder Recommendations
Concluding Observations
3. The Conference Purpose
Document first-hand views on the protection of emergency workers in terrorist attack response
PPE performance, availability, and use
Training
Hazard assessment and communication
Goals
Understand the post-attack environment
Identify hazards and protection needs
Provide input to PPE research agenda
Improve safety PPE education and training
4. ConferenceFormat
5. Response Characteristics
6. Response Characteristics:Large Scale Events Large physical area
Multiple simultaneous incidents (9/11)
Many responding agencies
Acquisition and management of back-up supplies impeded by air shutdown
Communications systems overloaded
1000s of anthrax calls
Resources unavailable or used ineffectively
7. Response Characteristics:Long-Duration Campaigns Equipment is designed for short intervals
Air bottles last for up to 30 minutes
Respirator cartridges clogged
Batteries need recharging
Turnout gear heavy, hot, & uncomfortable
Extended wear caused blisters & fatigue
Disposable garments tear
Responder productivity diminished
Responders modified or abandoned PPE
8. Response Characteristics:Multi-Threat Events Large scale “conventional” hazards
Intense fire, falling debris, structure collapse
Responders faced many additional risks
Jet fuel, rubble, dust, body parts/fluids, hazardous materials
Unknowns associated with terrorism
Secondary explosives/attacks
Nuclear, biological, chemical agents
Risks exacerbated by stress and fatigue
9. Response Characteristics:New Roles, New Responders Firefighters were engaged in non-traditional tasks
Trades workers thrown onto the front-lines
Equipment operators, iron-workers, sanitation, food service
Large numbers of off-duty personnel and citizen volunteers were on-scene
Few agencies and personnel were sufficiently prepared for anthrax
The disaster sites were crime scenes and entailed extensive law enforcement activity
PPE supply and training for law enforcement very limited
10. Personal Protection Lessons
11. Personal Protection Lessons:PPE Performance PPE worked as designed but fell short in multi-threat, extended campaigns
Respiratory protection
Full-face respirators hindered vision, communications
SCBA air supply too short
Inadequate information on anthrax protection
Garments
Turnout gear not adequate for rubble & confined spaces
BDUs do not provide thermal protection
Hazmat suits not durable
Gloves not abrasion resistant, flexible, and bio-proof
Not sized for female responders
Eye protection ineffective against dust
12. Personal Protection Lessons:PPE Availability Supply
Shortages were most critical in first few days
Logistics challenges delayed shipments and on-site distribution
Supplementary gear often not interoperable
Later in responses, surplus equipment became a problem
Anthrax calls led to shortages of disposable gear
Maintenance
Garments not cleaned and dried regularly
Limited on-site capability to fill air bottles, recharge batteries
Availability varied by organization
FEMA/USAR task forces well-equipped
Law enforcement/postal inspectors poorly-equipped
13. Personal Protection Lessons:Information and Training Risk assessment and communication was criticized
Initial sampling limited in scope
Monitoring technology inadequate
Poor coordination of monitoring
Inadequate communications to front-line responders
Inconsistent PPE standards among agencies contributed to misunderstandings
Anthrax response protocols were developed ad hoc
Limited PPE training was available for non-traditional responders and volunteers
14. Personal Protection Lessons:Site Management Scene control is critical for worker safety
Hard perimeter keeps out the untrained/unequipped
Entry points are a key PPE enforcement opportunity
Scene control facilitates personnel accountability
Unified command facilitates PPE enforcement
Coordination of different agency policies
Uniform enforcement of PPE policy
Consistent hazard information dissemination
Incident definition is a difficult issue
Managing PPE use in the transition from rescue to recovery phases is critical
15. Responder Recommendations
16. Responder Recommendations:Equipment Issues Enhance PPE performance
Comfort and operability for long-duration
Multi-hazard capability
Biological threats
Consider PPE as an ensemble
Improve PPE availability
Outfit all responders appropriately
Promote PPE standardization and interoperability
17. Responder Recommendations:Information and Training Develop advanced monitoring and information management technologies
Coordinate hazard assessment and communication among responding services
Implement standard PPE usage regulations across services
Integrate PPE and response training into standard operating procedures
Improve on-site training
For use of non-standard gear
For non-emergency personnel
18. Responder Recommendations:Management Matters Define incident command structure rapidly
Establish scene control quickly
Assign responsibility for PPE enforcement
Develop logistics for sustained responses
Include suppliers, transportation providers
Stock more PPE caches
Develop site management guidelines
Conduct multi-jurisdictional exercises to build experience and relationships among agencies
19. Concluding Observations Responders believe they lack the necessary personal protection information, training, and equipment for major disaster responses
Strategies for effectively providing needed equipment must be explored
R&D and technology transfer could provide ways to address the problems and trade-offs identified
PPE must provide appropriate balance between responder safety and mission effectiveness
Having effective personal protection policies and practices are as important as effective equipment
20. Further Information RAND Science & Technology
1200 South Hayes St.
Arlington, VA 22202
703-413-1100, x5521
contact-st@rand.org
Access the entire report online:
www.rand.org/publications/CF/CF176/