主要国家和全球的大规模突发事件、社会和生物医学后果风险(2012-2021年)

Q3 Health Professions
V. Evdokimov
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Medians, upper and lower quartiles for LSE indicators and their consequences (Me [q25; q75]) are specified. The data is dynamically presented as a set of polynomial trends of the 2nd order.Results and discussion. According to EM-DAT, 5533 large-scale emergencies were recorded worldwide in 2012-2021, including 3807 (67.2%) natural and 1814 (32.8%) man-made events. It turned out that the global risks of exposure to emergencies, death, injury (illness) and homelessness were higher in natural emergencies than in man-made ones. The origin of large-scale natural emergencies was as follows: geophysical - 301 (7.9 %), meteorological - 1238 (32.5 %), climatological -272 (7.1 %), hydrological - 1780 (46.9 %) and biological - 215 (5.6 %). Most of the victims were observed during hydrological emergencies, median - 34.8 million people or 0.45 % of the world's population. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

相关性:大规模突发事件(LSE)对日常活动造成严重干扰,而消除突发事件需要对劳动力和资源进行深刻的重新部署。其目标是分析过去10年(2012-2021年)在个别国家和全球范围内发生的大规模紧急情况的动态和风险,以及其社会和生物医学后果。方法:该研究基于紧急事件数据库(EM-DAT: OFDA/CRED) [https://www.emdat.be/]中报告的全球大规模紧急事件指标。所有紧急情况可分为两大类——自然灾害和人为灾害。对100万人计算了突发事件的社会和生物医学后果风险(10-6)。LSE指标的中位数、上、下四分位数及其后果(Me [q25;Q75])。数据动态地呈现为一组二阶多项式趋势。结果和讨论。EM-DAT数据显示,2012-2021年全球共发生5533起大规模突发事件,其中自然事件3807起(67.2%),人为事件1814起(32.8%)。结果表明,全球面临紧急情况、死亡、受伤(疾病)和无家可归的风险在自然紧急情况下高于人为紧急情况。大规模自然突发事件的成因依次为:地球物理301次(7.9%)、气象1238次(32.5%)、气候272次(7.1%)、水文1780次(46.9%)、生物215次(5.6%)。大多数受害者发生在水文紧急情况期间,中位数为3480万人,占世界人口的0.45%。气象紧急情况造成的生物医学后果最为严重(死亡风险0.55·10-6,受伤或患病风险2.38·10-6),水文和气象紧急情况造成的社会后果最为严重(无家可归风险分别为35、8·10-6和16.1·10-6)。气候和气象突发事件的经济后果最为严重(1次大规模突发事件的平均经济损失分别为17.27亿美元和16亿美元)。大型人为突发事件包括225起与工业有关的事件(13.1%),1206起(70%)和291起(16.9%)。在交通紧急情况下,生物医学后果最为严重(死亡风险0.54·10-6,受伤或生病风险0.25·10-6),在家庭紧急情况下,社会后果最为严重(无家可归风险1.12·10-6)。所有大规模突发事件中,欧洲报告发生648起(11.7%),亚洲报告发生2281起(41.2%),美洲报告发生1167起(21.1%),非洲报告发生1279起(23.1%),澳大利亚报告发生158起(2.1%)。通常,在考虑的主要国家(中国、德国、印度、日本和美国),大规模突发事件的生物医学和社会后果风险低于全球风险。俄罗斯专家和EM-DAT工作人员获得的关于国内大规模紧急情况的信息需要进一步同步。结论:计算出的指标可用于确定是否需要制定预防突发事件或将其后果降至最低的区域和全球措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Large-scale emergencies, risks of social and biomedical consequences in the leading countries and globally (2012—2021)
Relevance: Large-scale emergencies (LSE) cause critical disruption in routine activities, while the elimination requires profound redeployment of workforce and resources.The objective is to analyse the dynamics and risks of large-scale emergencies, as well as their social and biomedical consequences in a few individual countries and globally over the past 10 years (2012-2021).Methods: The study is based on global large-scale emergency indicators as reported in the Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT: OFDA/CRED) [https://www.emdat.be/]. All emergencies are split in two generalized groups - natural (natural disasters) and man-made. Risks of social and biomedical consequences of emergencies were calculated for 1 million people (10-6). Medians, upper and lower quartiles for LSE indicators and their consequences (Me [q25; q75]) are specified. The data is dynamically presented as a set of polynomial trends of the 2nd order.Results and discussion. According to EM-DAT, 5533 large-scale emergencies were recorded worldwide in 2012-2021, including 3807 (67.2%) natural and 1814 (32.8%) man-made events. It turned out that the global risks of exposure to emergencies, death, injury (illness) and homelessness were higher in natural emergencies than in man-made ones. The origin of large-scale natural emergencies was as follows: geophysical - 301 (7.9 %), meteorological - 1238 (32.5 %), climatological -272 (7.1 %), hydrological - 1780 (46.9 %) and biological - 215 (5.6 %). Most of the victims were observed during hydrological emergencies, median - 34.8 million people or 0.45 % of the world's population. The most serious bio-medical consequences were observed in meteorological emergencies (risk of death 0.55 • 10-6, risk of injury or illness 2.38 • 10-6), social consequences were most serious in case of hydrological and meteorological emergencies (risk of homelessness 35,8 • 10-6 and 16.1 • 10-6 respectively), economic consequences were most serious in climatological and meteorological emergencies (average economic loss of 1 large scale emergency makes 1 billion 727 million and 1 billion 600 million USA dollars respectively). Large-scale man-made emergencies included 225 industry-related (13.1%), 1206 transport (70%) and 291 domestic (16.9 %) events. The most serious bio-medical consequences were observed in transport emergencies (risk of death 0.54 • 10-6, risk of injury or illness 0.25 • 10-6), social consequences were most serious in domestic emergencies (risk of homelessness 1.12 • 10-6). All large-scale emergencies included 648 (11.7 %) reported for Europe, 2281 (41.2 %) for Asia, 1167 (21.1 %) for the Americas, 1279 (23.1 %) for Africa and 158 (2.1 %) for Australia. As a rule, risks of biomedical and social consequences of large-scale emergencies in leading countries under consideration (China, Germany, India, Japan and the USA) were lower than global risks. Information on domestic large-scale emergencies obtained by Russian experts and EM-DAT staff requires further synchronisation.Conclusion: The calculated indicators can be used to determine the need to develop measures to prevent emergencies or minimize their consequences regionally and globally.
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CiteScore
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