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- Risk Communicator
- Issue 3
- Emergency & Risk Communication
- Anthrax Scare
- Pan Flu Preparedness
- YouTube is Your Friend
- Additional Resources
- Contributors
- Issue 2
- Priceless Collaboration for Hurricane Preparedness
- Talking to WHO's John Rainford - New WHO Guidelines
- Emergency Communication Challenges in Hurricane Katrina Response
- Hurricane Readiness in High-Risk Areas: Survey Results
- Elements of a Successful Exercise: Functional vs Tabletop and Beyond
- Collaboration & Communication During Emergency Response
- Public Health Observances
- Calendar of Training Opportunities
- Contributors
- Issue 1
- Introduction to the Risk Communicator
- Social Media & Emergency Communication
- Messaging Is Matter of Trust
- Program Spotlight: Frontlines of the CA Wildfires
- Research Summaries: Summaries of Work from Deborah Glik and Craig Lefebvre
- Risk Communication Opportunities During National Observances
- Upcoming Conferences, Training, and Workshops of Interest to Risk Communicators
- Contributors
- About the Newsletter
- Communicating in the First Hours
- SNAPS
- What CDC Is Doing
- What You Can Do
- Blog: Public Health Matters
- What's New
Radiation Emergencies
Information for Emergency Responders
Emergency responders are responsible for protecting and preserving life, property, evidence, or the environment in the earliest stages of a mass casualty event or other emergency. Emergency responders will be responsible for rescuing and delivering care to victims of a radiation emergency at or near the incident site. To help emergency responders develop plans and response capacity for radiation emergencies, CDC has the following resources:
Patient Management
- Staff Protection (PPE)
- Initial Onsite Activities
- Triage
- Decontamination of Patients
- Onsite Medical Management
- Transport of Patients
Guidelines and Recommendations
- Pocket Guide: Radiological Terrorism Emergency Management
- Guidelines for Handling Decedents Contaminated with Radioactive Materials
Radiological Terrorism:
Tool Kit for Emergency Services Clinicians
A free tool kit for planning and response
- Just-in-Time Training for Hospital Clinicians
- Radiological Emergency Management Pocket Guide
- Medical Response to Mass Casualties
- Medical Response to Nuclear and Radiological Terrorism
- The Role of Public Health in a Nuclear or Radiological Terrorist Incident
- Acute Radiation Syndrome (brochure)
- Cutaneous Radiation Injury (brochure)
- Prenatal Radiation Exposure (brochure)
To order copies, please send an e-mail to cdcinfo@cdc.gov or call 1-800-CDC-INFO (1-800-232-4636); TTY: (888) 232-6348.
Related Links
- Equipment for Monitoring Radiation on People (EPA)
- Screening for Contamination Using Handheld Monitors
- Types of Radiation Emergencies
- Guidelines for Handling Decedents Contaminated with Radioactive Materials
- Training for Handling Decedents Contaminated with Radioactive Materials
- Countermeasures/Treatment
- Fact sheets on radiation Topics
- Mental Health
- Protecting Yourself and Your Family
- Radiological Terrorism: Tool Kit for Clinicians
- Radiological Terrorism: Took Kit for Public Health
- Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (USUHS)
- Handbook for Responding to a Radiological Dispersal Device (CRCPD)
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- Page last updated March 31, 2010
- Page last reviewed March 31, 2010
- Content source: Radiation Studies Branch (RSB), Division of Environmental Hazards and Health Effects (EHHE), National Center for Environmental Health (NCEH), Coordinating Center for Environmental Health and Injury Prevention (CCEHIP)
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