EMT Basic · Chapter 41 · Review · Chapter track
Terrorism Response and Disaster Management
Referencing the content of EMT-Basic training and emergency patient care
Learning objectives (14)
Define international terrorism and domestic terrorism; include examples of incidents that have been caused by each one — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Define weapon of mass destruction (WMD) and weapon of mass casualty (WMC); include examples of weapons considered WMDs — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Demonstrate the steps EMTs can take for the management of a patient exposed to a chemical agent — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1528); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Demonstrate the steps EMTs can take to establish and reassess scene safety based on a scenario of a terrorist event — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1528); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Demonstrate the use of the DuoDote Auto-Injector and/or the Antidote Treatment Nerve Agent Auto-Injector — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1528); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Describe the mechanisms of injury caused by incendiary and explosive devices; include the types and severity of wounds — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Discuss the history of chemical agents, their four main classifications, routes of exposure, and the effects on patient care — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Discuss the history of nuclear/radiologic devices, sources of radiologic materials and dispersal devices, medical management of patients, and protective measures EMTs must take dur — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Explain how the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) National Terrorism Advisory System (NTAS) relates to the actions and precautions EMTs must take while performing their daily a — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Explain the critical response actions related to establishing and reassessing scene safety, personnel protection, notification procedures, and establishing command that EMTs must p — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Explain the role of EMS in relation to syndromic surveillance and points of distribution (PODs) during a biologic event — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
List three categories of biologic agents, their routes of exposure, effects on the patient, and patient care — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Name four different types of goals that commonly motivate terrorist groups to carry out terrorist attacks — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Name the key observations EMTs must make on every call to determine the potential of a terrorist attack — Knowledge/skills objective (printed page 1527); confirm wording in your course copy.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
- Ready.gov · DHS
Chapter web resources
Optional reading from authoritative sites. Your textbook remains the primary source for this course.
- CDC emergency preparedness · CDC
Disaster and terrorism public health response
- Ready.gov · DHS
All-hazards preparedness for responders
When sources disagree (5 topics to verify before you teach from this chapter alone)
Showing Chapter track material. Switch tracks on the chapter page.
Vocabulary · 14
Terrorism
The use or threat of violence to intimidate or coerce a population or government in pursuit of political, religious, or ideological goals.
SourceFBI — Definitions of terrorism
CBRNE
An acronym for the categories of weapons of mass destruction — Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, Explosive.
SourceFEMA — CBRNE incidents
Weapon of mass destruction (WMD)
Any weapon designed to cause widespread death, destruction, or harm — including CBRNE categories.
SourceFBI — Weapons of mass destruction
Decontamination
The process of removing or neutralizing harmful substances from people, equipment, or environments.
SourceCDC ATSDR — Decontamination procedures
Gross decontamination
Rapid removal of contaminants — typically with copious water and clothing removal — to reduce immediate exposure before technical decon.
SourceCDC ATSDR — Gross decontamination
Technical decontamination
Controlled, thorough decontamination performed in a structured corridor with appropriately trained personnel and detergents.
SourceCDC ATSDR — Technical decontamination
Secondary device
An additional explosive or harmful device designed to detonate after first responders arrive at the initial event.
SourceFBI — Secondary device awareness
SLUDGEM
Cholinergic toxidrome from nerve agents or organophosphates — Salivation, Lacrimation, Urination, Defecation, GI distress, Emesis, Miosis.
SourceCDC — Nerve agent — clinical effects
Nerve agents (sarin, VX)
Organophosphate chemical weapons that inhibit acetylcholinesterase, producing the SLUDGEM toxidrome and rapid respiratory failure.
SourceCDC — Nerve agent fact sheet
Cyanide
A cellular asphyxiant that blocks oxygen use at the mitochondrial level; presents with severe acidosis and cardiovascular collapse.
SourceCDC — Cyanide fact sheet
Anthrax
A biological agent caused by Bacillus anthracis — can present in cutaneous, inhalation, or gastrointestinal forms.
SourceCDC — Anthrax — about
Smallpox
A highly contagious viral biological agent (variola) eradicated in 1980 but retained in research labs and considered a category-A bioterror threat.
SourceCDC — Smallpox
Acute radiation syndrome (ARS)
Illness from a high whole-body dose of penetrating radiation, with hematologic, GI, and neurovascular phases.
SourceCDC — Acute radiation syndrome
Hazardous materials (HazMat)
Substances that pose an unreasonable risk to health, safety, or property when released; managed by trained HazMat teams.
SourceUS Department of Transportation — PHMSA — Hazardous materials definitions
Sequences · 2
- CBRNE scene approach — Order EMT priorities arriving at a suspected CBRNE incident.
- SLUDGEM signs of nerve agent exposure — Order the seven letters of the SLUDGEM cholinergic mnemonic.