Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6747680 | International Journal of Critical Infrastructure Protection | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
A widespread emergency event in the United States triggers the activation of a regional emergency operations center that manages a coordinated response to the disaster. Historically, the time-critical decisions made by emergency managers in the face of incomplete information and inadequate historical emergency event data have been guided primarily by their experience. The learning curve for emergency managers, especially novice managers, is steep, and is exacerbated by the complexity and scope of emergency events. This paper proposes a methodology designed to provide emergency managers with locality-specific information and resource allocation recommendations for large-scale event response, creating the foundation for a decision support system that draws on emergency event data. This work is the first to use locally-specific data for an emergency management decision support system. Two major allocation scenarios that influence the number of resources allocated to an event are considered and solutions are suggested to address them. Although the methodology is developed for a mid-sized region, it is generalizable to any region.
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Authors
Carol Romanowski, Rajendra Raj, Jennifer Schneider, Sumita Mishra, Vinay Shivshankar, Srikant Ayengar, Fernando Cueva,