Disaster Management: Floods, Earthquakes, Cyclones, Landslides
π Disaster Management β Explained Simply
πͺοΈ What is a Disaster?
A disaster is a sudden or gradual event (natural or man-made) that causes:
β Loss of lives
β Damage to property
β Economic and environmental harm
π΄ It overwhelms the ability of people or governments to respond.
π Types of Disasters
π Water & Climate Disasters
β Floods, cyclones, cloudbursts
β Heat waves, droughts, hailstorms
π Geological Disasters
β Earthquakes
β Landslides
β Volcanic eruptions
π¦ Biological Disasters
β Epidemics (COVID-19, Swine flu)
β Locust attacks, pest outbreaks
π Industrial Disasters
β Oil spills
β Chemical leaks
β Factory fires
β’οΈ Nuclear Disasters
β Radiation leaks
β Reactor meltdowns
π₯ Man-Made Disasters
β Fires in urban areas or forests
β Building collapses
π οΈ What is Disaster Management?
As per the Disaster Management Act, 2005, it is the process of:
β π Preventing disasters
β π» Reducing risks
β π§° Preparing in advance
β π Responding quickly
β π Rescuing & relieving victims
β π§± Rebuilding lives and infrastructure
π’ Key Disaster Management Authorities
| Level | Authority | Headed by |
|---|---|---|
| National | NDMA | Prime Minister |
| State | SDMA | Chief Minister |
| District | DDMA | District Magistrate |
| Local | Municipal/Panchayat | Local Authorities |
β NEC (National Executive Committee) helps prepare the national disaster plan.
𧬠Focus on Biological Disasters
Definition: Disasters caused by the spread of harmful organisms β viruses, bacteria, pests.
π Scale
β Epidemic = Affects one area or community
β Pandemic = Spreads across countries/continents
π‘οΈ Key Roles in Biological Disaster Management
| Role | Authority |
|---|---|
| Epidemic Management | Ministry of Health & Family Welfare |
| Disease Outbreak Investigation | National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD) |
| Biological Warfare Control | Ministry of Home Affairs |
π§ͺ Biohazard Classification (BSL β Biosafety Levels)
| Level | Example | Protection Needed |
|---|---|---|
| BSL-1 | Harmless bacteria | Basic protection |
| BSL-2 | Hepatitis, HIV | Cabinets, gloves |
| BSL-3 | Anthrax, MERS | Respirators, protocols |
| BSL-4 | Ebola, Lassa fever | Full body suit, air supply |
π§Ό Prevention of Biological Hazards
For Health Workers
β Use PPE (masks, gloves, gowns)
β Ensure proper ventilation
β Maintain personal hygiene
β Use sterilization tools
Environmental Measures
β Ensure clean water
β Proper sewage system
β Avoid overcrowding
β Control vectors (mosquitoes, rodents)
π¦ Spray insecticides & clean stagnant water!
π¨ After Disaster β Preventing Epidemics
β Use IDSS (Integrated Disease Surveillance System)
β Track and respond to disease outbreaks
β Inform public health authorities
ποΈ Legal Acts for Disaster Management
-
Water Act (1974)
-
Air Act (1981)
-
Environment Act (1986)
-
Disaster Management Act (2005)
-
Epidemic Diseases Act (1897) (outdated, needs revision)
π§ Gaps in Current System
β No national policy for biological disasters
β Lack of trained staff, labs, and emergency supplies
β No Integrated Ambulance Network
β Limited public health infrastructure
β Prevention and Mitigation (All Disasters)
Key Areas of Focus:
π Risk Mapping using GIS (e.g., NDEM, NSDI)
ποΈ Prevent unplanned urbanization
π οΈ Strengthen critical infrastructure (roads, bridges, dams)
π± Promote sustainable development
π‘οΈ Tackle climate change to reduce disasters like floods, cyclones
π Disaster Management Cycle
Mitigation β Preparedness β Response β Recovery