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Evaluate the efficacy of search-and-rescue efforts and of
medical care rendered following earthquakes.
A careful investigation of the organizational barriers to
rapid response is required to improve the ability of rescue and
field medical teams to respond rapidly enough to save the lives of
the most seriously injured disaster victims.
Studies of the epidemiology of injured survivors may also
help to identify the best way to dismantle a collapsed building
(135) and to conduct rescue without doing more damage to those
trapped.
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Study immediate medical needs of people entrapped in
buildings following earthquakes.
Such studies could help identify effective interventions to
prevent or to manage casualties (e.g. treatment of crush syndrome)
as well as to minimize disability (e.g., by reducing the incidence
of wound infections and postoperative complications in the field).
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Determine whether knowledge of injury patterns following an
earthquake can be used to suggest design changes in the structural
and nonstructural components of a building.
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