Example Of Environmental Studies Student’s Name Essay
Type of paper: Essay
Topic: Disaster, Health, Face, Information, Challenges, Security, Value, Emergency
Pages: 1
Words: 275
Published: 2020/09/27
Introduction
As an independent contractor who specializes in helping municipalities and quantifying and prioritizing loss potential on large governmental structures when faced with the potential for a severe weather event, such as a flood, hurricane, or tornado, I have come to appreciate the reality of the challenges that face disaster preparedness. As one of the local City Manager tasked with evaluating the security of the largest structure and to provide security recommendations based on your analysis, I came face-to-face with one of the most formidable challenges of disaster preparedness which is determining the true value of information, particularly weather updates.
According to Rabins and others (2011), the reality above comes against the backdrop of many Emergency Operation Centers from where disaster management, traffic conditions, weather updates, high and low tides, local TV news, public transportation and utility updates and emergency responders are done. However, there is so much data on emergency preparedness that they must be intelligently parsed and processed, so as to give the true value.
The import of the immediately foregoing is that actions that are based on weak data or anything other than the true value are more harmful or more ineffective. In the face of growing infrastructure, it is for instance futile to rush disaster victims to the nearest health centers without knowing: the health centers’ specialty; the fastest route to the health center and its tenability; unrelated accidents and happenstances that may derail the route; and the health center’s capacity or ability to accommodate additional patients (Kunreuther and Michel-Kerjan, 2011).
It is against the backdrop f the foregoing that the need to introduce software and alternative technical solutions to handle (interpret, analyze, store, evaluate and retrieve) the heavy deluge of data. This technological advancement will have to be merged with efficient operational expertise, know-how, improved preparedness and cost efficiency.
References
Kunreuther, H. and Michel-Kerjan, E. (2011). People Get Ready Disaster Preparedness. Issues in Science and Technology, 28 (1), 39
Rabins, P. V., et al. (2011). Challenges for Mental Health Services Raised by Disaster Preparedness: Mapping the Ethical and Therapeutic Terrain. Bio-security and bioterrorism: bio-defense strategy, practice, and science, 9 (2), 175 - 179
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