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Space-Borne Systems in Support of Emergency and Disaster Medicine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2012

Gloria W. Heath
Affiliation:
Studies Committee on Worldwide Disaster Response, Alerting and Location, and Safety Employing Space-Borne Systems of the International Academy of Astronautics.
Jerry Freibaum
Affiliation:
NASA
Paul B. Richards
Affiliation:
Naval Research Laboratory

Extract

The quick re-establishment of communications is vital to all disaster relief operations, but simple effective means of doing so are usually lacking. The unpredictability of the type, time, and location of catastrophic or disaster events requires a communications capability which is mobile, versatile, and dependable under all conditions of weather and terrain. Similar needs are essential for emergency medical services and search and rescue operations. These are problems without national boundaries.

Type
Part I: Research-Education-Organization
Copyright
Copyright © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 1985

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References

1. Burge, C, Nagurney, F. An evaluation of the experimental application of mobile satellite communications in rural EMS systems: Demand, costs, and benefits. Prepared for NASA, Contract NAS13-95, by Univ. Southern Mississippi, December 1980.Google Scholar
2. Freibaum, J. The application of mobile satellite services to emergency response communications. ICC Paper, 1980.Google Scholar
3. Freibaum, J, Burge, C. The application of communications satellite technology to emergency medical services. IAF Paper August 1979;79–A29.Google Scholar
4. Richards, PB, Fletcher, JR, Bond, JC et al. Computer model for simulation of emergency medical systems. Military Medicine 1979,144:4.Google Scholar