Author/Authors :
Jeffrey S. Kirkpatrick، نويسنده , , Jacqueline M. Howard، نويسنده , , David A. Reed، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
As part of comprehensive joint medical surveillance measures outlined by the Department of Defense, the US
Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine (USACHPPM) is beginning to assess environmental
health threats to continental US military installations. A common theme in comprehensive joint medical surveillance,
in support of Force Health Protection, is the identification and assessment of potential environmental health hazards,
and the evaluation and documentation of actual exposures in both a continental US and outside a continental US
setting. For the continental US assessments, the USACHPPM has utilized the US Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) database for risk management plans in accordance with Public Law 106-40, and the toxic release inventory
database, in a state-of the art geographic information systems based program, termed the Consequence Assessment
and Management Tool Set, or CATS, for assessing homeland industrial chemical hazards outside the military gates.
As an example, the US EPA toxic release inventory and risk management plans databases are queried to determine
the types and locations of industries surrounding a continental US military installation. Contaminants of concern are
then ranked with respect to known toxicological and physical hazards, where they are then subject to applicable
downwind hazard simulations using applicable meteorological and climatological data sets. The composite downwind
hazard areas are mapped in relation to emergency response planning guidelines (ERPG), which were developed by
the American Industrial Hygiene Association to assist emergency response personnel planning for catastrophic
chemical releases. In addition, other geographic referenced data such as transportation routes, satellite imagery and
population data are included in the operational, equipment, and morale risk assessment and management process.
These techniques have been developed to assist military medical planners and operations personnel in determining
the industrial hazards, vulnerability assessments and health risk assessments to continental United States military
installations. These techniques and procedures support the Department of Defense Force Protection measures, which
provides awareness of a terrorism threat, appropriate measures to prevent terrorist attacks and mitigate terrorism’s
effects in the event that preventive measures are ineffective.
Keywords :
Environmental health hazards , Operational risk management , Toxic industrial materials , Emergency response planningguidelines