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Japan will face extraordinary health challenges after tsunami

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  • Japan will face extraordinary health challenges after tsunami

    Public health officials in Japan will face a host of unusual infections and trauma injuries, those with experience in the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake say.

    After the surging ocean waters spawned by Japan's magnitude 8.9 earthquake receded, the drowned were only the first victims to be counted.

    In the coming days, physicians and public health officials along Japan's hard-hit eastern coast can expect a second wave of tsunami victims with aspiration-related illnesses, trauma and crush wounds, as well as the threat of disease spread by contaminated water.

    As they tend to survivors, Japanese officials can look to the experience of health workers who ministered to victims after the massive tsunami that inundated Indian Ocean nations on Dec. 26, 2004.

    Writing to colleagues in the New England Journal of Medicine, physicians at a regional hospital in Phangnga, Thailand, noted that although drowning is responsible for most of the fatalities, a tsunami also inflicts head injuries, fractures and cuts as it slams together debris, people and stationary objects. In the week after the 2004 tsunami, physicians at Takuapa General Hospital treated 2,285 patients with trauma, with 11% of those cases categorized as serious and 17% considered intermediate.

    Many surgical patients developed foul-smelling infections that had to be treated with an amoebicide and anti-protozoal medication in addition to normal antibiotics, the doctors reported.

    A 2005 report by German physicians who cared for 17 critically injured tsunami victims listed some of the unusual strains of bacteria that had colonized the wounds. Many of those strains are resistant to multiple front-line antibiotics, they wrote in the journal Critical Care Medicine.

    The flesh surrounding tsunami victims' wounds has often been crushed by falling or floating debris, cutting off blood supply and causing muscle to die, said Dr. Lee Weiss, regional medical director of Emergent Medical Associates in Manhattan Beach. Once victims reach a hospital, amputation is often the only option.

    Public health officials often struggle with water treatment and distribution systems that have been contaminated by ocean water and by oil, gas, pesticides and decaying bodies carried inland by the waves.

    "There's a very high likelihood of cross-contamination of waste water and treated water," said civil engineer Kripa Singh of the University of New Brunswick in Canada.

    Though cholera and typhoid are unlikely in a country as developed as Japan, outbreaks can happen, Weiss said. Even run-of-the-mill gastrointestinal illnesses from contaminated water can make life miserable for uprooted and often grieving victims, he added.

    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

  • #2
    Re: Japan will face extraordinary health challenges after tsunami

    machine translation -

    "Million" is a machine translation artifact. It really means 10,000 -

    Support 390,000 refugees issue
    May 13 at 9:30 in 3 twitter tweet (click on the site leaves the NHK)

    Shelter has been established by the earthquake of the 11th, more than 2100 locations in six prefectures in the Tohoku region, the number of people have found that the shelter reaches at least 39 million people. Some shelters are insufficient and kerosene, many place that is difficult to survive a slowdown demanding day and night, has become a challenge to decide will they support what people have been evacuated .

    NHK is summarized on the evacuation of residents now known to 7:00 am on July 13 municipalities in six northeastern province devastated by the quake. According to that, the number of people have been evacuated and shelter are provided to each province, Miyagi prefecture 965 locations ▽, 14,530,021 people. 467 locations in Fukushima Prefecture ▽, 10,150,012 people. 387 locations in Iwate Prefecture ▽, 46,050,004 people. Aomori Prefecture, 186 locations ▽, 38,500,001 people. Yamagata Prefecture 48 locations ▽, 915 people. 77 locations in Akita Prefecture ▽, 387 people have become. Looking across the six prefectures in the Tohoku region, the number of shelter locations along 2130, the number of displaced people are up to at least 22,250,039 people. Each municipality in the Tohoku region, which takes time to understand the situation more damaged area is large, in fact, the number of people have been evacuated and shelters may be more than this. Some shelters are insufficient and kerosene, many place that is difficult to survive a slowdown severe morning and evening, they become a critical issue we are trying to support what people have been evacuated Masu.

    NHKのニュースサイト。国内外の取材網を生かし、さまざまな分野のニュースをいち早く、正確にお伝えします。ニュース速報はもちろん、現場の記者が執筆した読み応えのある深掘りコンテンツや、NHKならではの豊富な動画コンテンツも。

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    • #3
      Re: Japan will face extraordinary health challenges after tsunami

      Some shelters are insufficient and kerosene
      Presuming the kerosene is partly for heat, this may become even more of a problem given the forecast for snow and night temps to 21F for Thursday & Friday. I posted details in another thread.

      .
      "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

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      • #4
        Re: Japan will face extraordinary health challenges after tsunami

        Disease-related deaths surge in Miyagi Pref.
        SENDAI (Jiji Press)--The numbers of cases of heart failure, stroke, pneumonia and cardiac arrest surged in Miyagi Prefecture after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami last year, a study by Tohoku University has revealed.

        The increase can be attributed to disaster-related stress and the use of water polluted by the tsunami, according to the survey by a team led by Prof. Hiroaki Shimokawa.

        ...
        (Aug. 29, 2012)


        Short And Mid-Term Cardiovascular Effects of Japan's 2011 Earthquake and Tsunami: Incidence Rises With the Seismic Peak
        ScienceDaily (Aug. 27, 2012) ? The Japanese earthquake and tsunami of 11 March 2011, which hit the north-east coast of Japan with a magnitude of 9.0 on the Richter scale, was one of the largest ocean-trench earthquakes ever recorded in Japan. The tsunami caused huge damage, including 15,861 dead and 3018 missing persons, and, as of 6 June 2012, 388,783 destroyed homes.

        Following an investigation of the ambulance records made by doctors in the Miyagi prefecture, close to the epicentre of the earthquake and where the damage was greatest, cardiologist Dr Hiroaki Shimokawa and colleagues from the Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine at Sendai, Japan, found that the weekly occurrence of five conditions -- heart failure, acute coronary syndrome (including unstable angina and acute MI), stroke, cardio-pulmonary arrest and pneumonia -- all increased sharply soon after the earthquake occurred.
        ...
        The Japanese earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011, which hit the north-east coast of Japan with a magnitude of 9.0 on the Richter scale, was one of the largest ocean-trench earthquakes ever recorded in Japan. The tsunami caused huge damage, including 15,861 dead and 3018 missing persons, and, as of June 6, 2012, 388,783 destroyed homes.
        Twitter: @RonanKelly13
        The views expressed are mine alone and do not represent the views of my employer or any other person or organization.

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