Article contents
From Complex Emergencies to Terrorism — New Tools for Health-Sector Coordination in Conflict-Associated Disasters
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 June 2012
Abstract
Inter-agency coordination in humanitarian assistance dates as a discipline from the 1960s. The United Nations, Red Cross, governmental, and nongovernmental agencies have evolved different mechanisms to achieve it. Present practices in field-based, inter-agency coordination of the health sector remain variable and non-standardized. International experiences in coordination of humanitarian assistance reveal numerous issues of jurisdiction, authority, capacity, and competency. New tools to help overcome these issues in the health-sector coordination include binding principles of engagement, protocols for the assumption of responsibilities, standardized minimum essential data sets, and health-sector component summaries.
Keywords
- Type
- Special Report
- Information
- Prehospital and Disaster Medicine , Volume 18 , Issue 3: Terrorism-II: Special Reports , September 2003 , pp. 263 - 271
- Copyright
- Copyright © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 2003
References
- 9
- Cited by