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On Disaster Research Part I: Introduction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2012

Martin Elliot Silverstein*
Affiliation:
Clinical Professor of Surgery, F. Edward Hebert School of Medicine, Uniformed ServicesUniversity for the Health Sciences, Washington, D.C..
*
7041 N. Corrida de Venado, Tucson, Arizona 85718USA, TELEX: (650) 251-1753 MCI UW

Extract

The study of disasters has become a new, applied science. The increasing global population is dependent on fragile links of communication and transportation, and the modern technology of weaponry has led to new forms of armed conflict. These combined factors have made our need to understand the process of disaster research ever more pressing. Similarly, workers and researchers in the field must reappraise their methodologies and their contributions to the literature of catastrophe. The end result of good research and its promulgation in journals, articles, and even press conferences should lead to the saving of lives, the protection of property, and the stability of our communities. Hastily performed research and misleading reporting can and does lead to unnecessary death and injury, and to the wasteful expenditure of scarce resources.

Type
Investigator
Copyright
Copyright © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 1991

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References

1. Ricci, EM, Pretto, EA, Safar, P, et al. Disaster reanimatology potentials: A structured interview study in Armenia. Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 1991;6:159166.Google Scholar
2 Klain, M, Ricci, E, Safar, P, et al. Disaster reanimatology potentials: A structured interview study in Armenia I. Methodology and preliminary results. Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 1989;4:135154.Google Scholar