DocumentCode :
853420
Title :
Terrorism risks in rural and frontier America
Author :
Stamm, B. Hudnall
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Psychol., Idaho State Univ., Pocatello, ID, USA
Volume :
21
Issue :
5
fYear :
2002
Firstpage :
100
Lastpage :
111
Abstract :
Policy for the safety of the United States must include an awareness of the importance of rural and frontier areas to urban areas. Water, power, and food are not available in sufficient amounts to support urban areas and are routinely shipped in from rural areas. National plans should address the increased costs of operating in rural areas and the increased burdens placed on most health and safety workers who work longer hours and take fewer days off. Other factors are also important, such as the status of regional hospitals (e.g. critical access, secondary, tertiary) and the type of Emergency Medical Service (volunteer versus paid), and the availability of HAZMAT teams and decontamination units. Regional infrastructure plays a part. It can include access to public transportation, highway systems, and the telecommunications network, as well as basic climate and geographical considerations, which includes proximity to a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) that may provide resources for responding to disasters and terrorist attacks. Finally, it is important to take into consideration the base population, its median income, and the region´s status as a health professions shortage area or otherwise medically underserved area.
Keywords :
demography; disasters; government policies; health care; health hazards; natural resources; personnel; planning; safety; transportation; Emergency Medical Service; HAZMAT teams; Metropolitan Statistical Area; United States; base population; climate considerations; critical access; decontamination units; disasters; food; frontier America; frontier areas; geographical considerations; health professions shortage area; health workers; highway systems; increased burdens; median income; medically underserved area; national plans; operating costs; policy; power; public transportation; regional hospitals; regional infrastructure; rural America; rural areas; safety; safety workers; telecommunications network; terrorism risks; terrorist attacks; urban areas; water; Availability; Costs; Decontamination; Hazardous materials; Health and safety; Hospitals; Medical services; Terrorism; Transportation; Urban areas; Disaster Planning; Food Contamination; Natural Disasters; Public Policy; Risk Assessment; Rural Population; Security Measures; Terrorism; United States; Water Pollution;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0739-5175
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MEMB.2002.1044179
Filename :
1044179
Link To Document :
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