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6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue
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6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Structural Collapse

Search and Rescue

Page 2: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Objectives (1 of 3)

• Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations.

• Describe the various types of structural collapse events.

• Describe the resources needed to conduct a structural collapse search and rescue operation.

Page 3: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Objectives (2 of 3)

• Describe response planning and incident management requirements related to a structural collapse search and rescue incident.

• Describe site control operations at a structural collapse incident.

• List general hazards associated with a structural collapse incident.

Page 4: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Objectives (3 of 3)

• Identify building construction types and their associated collapse characteristics.

• List the five types of collapse void patterns.

• Describe the FEMA USAR search, building, victim location, and structure marking systems.

Page 5: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Skills Objectives

Remove readily accessible victims from a structural collapse incident.

Page 6: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Structural Collapse Scenarios

• Vary in difficulty based on significance of collapse and size, type, and occupancy of building involved

• Require standard, flexible rescue plan of action

• Require various resources, tools, personnel

Page 7: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Various Factors Cause Collapse(1 of 3)

• Nature:– Hurricanes, tornadoes, high winds,

earthquakes, mudslides, landslides, floods, snow or ice loads on roofs

• Fire damage

Page 8: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Various Factors Cause Collapse(2 of 3)

© Baloncici/ShutterStock, Inc.

Page 9: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Various Factors Cause Collapse(3 of 3)

• Interior or exterior blast: – Gas leak explosion, boiler explosion, terrorist

activity

• Human error:– Impact by transportation vehicle, faulty

engineering, improper building materials

Page 10: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Applicable Standards

• NFPA 1006, Standard for Technical Rescuer Professional Qualifications: job performance requirements for responders at technician-level

• NFPA 1670, Standard on Operations and Training for Technical Search and Rescue Incidents: organizational requirements

Page 11: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Awareness Level Responders

• Serve as equipment runners.

• Help move and care for casualties.

• Maintain perimeter control.

• Provide command post assistance.

• Direct traffic.

• Perform other important tasks within training level.

Page 12: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Hazard Control Resources Include (1 of 2)

• Firefighting assets

• Utility company assistance

• Trained professionals to control secondary collapse hazards

• Hazardous materials response teams

Page 13: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Hazard Control Resources Include (2 of 2)

• Law enforcement

• Search and rescue teams trained in structural collapse rescue

• Search assets:– Physical search teams, canine search teams,

search teams with technical equipment

Page 14: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Technical Search Resources (1 of 3)

• Acoustic devices pick up noises from within collapsed building.

• Seismic devices sense vibrations, movement from within or around building.

• Visual search devices pick up visual or thermal image.

Page 15: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Technical Search Resources (2 of 3)

Courtesy of CON-SPACE Communications

Page 16: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Technical Search Resources (3 of 3)

© Jones and Bartlett Publishers. Courtesy of Glen E. Ellman and Texas Engineering Extension Service, Texas A&M System.

Page 17: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Extrication

• Actions taken by responders to remove victim from entrapment at building

• Involves:– Lifting heavy objects– Cutting through building materials– Breaching structural building components

Page 18: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Special Training Required Includes

• Use of hand, power tools to lift and stabilize heavy objects and possibly move heavy loads safely to access victims

• Knowledge of mechanical advantage, classes of levers, pneumatic lifting bags, cribbing stabilization systems

Page 19: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Rescue Resources Include (1 of 4)

• Breaching: cutting through wood, steel, concrete, furniture, appliances, to access victims

• Shoring: using tools, equipment to support and stabilize damaged buildings and structural members to access victims and avoid secondary collapse

Page 20: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Rescue Resources Include (2 of 4)

© Glen E. Ellman

Page 21: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Rescue Resources Include (3 of 4)

Courtesy of Robert Rhea

Page 22: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Rescue Resources Include (4 of 4)

• Victim packaging: using equipment (stretchers, baskets) to load and move victims to safety

Page 23: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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EMS Resources (1 of 2)

• May be significant at collapse event, especially with mass-casualty

• Requires BLS and ALS care

• Manage injuries, medical complications typical at collapse, including:– Fractures, respiratory distress, dehydration,

compartment syndrome, crush syndrome

Page 24: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

EMS Resources (2 of 2)

Courtesy of Robert Rhea

Page 25: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Hazardous Materials Resources• Include personnel trained and equipped to

detect chemical, biological, nuclear, WMD hazards:– WMD threats: chemical, biological,

radiological/nuclear, explosive

• Involve atmospheric monitoring to determine dangerous atmospheres and establish control zones

• Include specialized PPE, equipment, procedures

Page 26: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Law Enforcement Resources

• Establish perimeter control.

• Perform site security.

• Control traffic flow.

• Maintain force protection for emergency responders.

• Interview witnesses, bystanders, and co-workers.

Page 27: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Logistical Support Resources

• Nighttime lighting, bathroom facilities, food and shelter items for rescue workers

• Apparatus maintenance, refueling, field repair of tools and equipment, procurement of rescue tools, supplies, and equipment

• Provide on-site ER with physician and nurses for victims.

Page 28: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Strategic Objectives

• Evaluate the scene and identify potential victims and locations.

• Initiate operations to minimize hazards to operating personnel and trapped victims.

• Search structure, rescue, and remove trapped victims.

• Minimize further injury to victims during search, rescue, and removal operations.

Page 29: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Minimum ICS Management Personnel

• Incident commander (IC)

• Operations section chief

• Planning section chief

• Logistics section chief

• Safety officer

• Public information officer

Page 30: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Incident Action Plan (IAP)

• Identifies overall control objectives for collapse emergency

• Makes provisions for long-term staffing

• Makes tactical and resource assignments

• Identifies operational work periods and safety messages

Page 31: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Organizational Needs Assessment Includes

• Types of buildings that may fail and construction materials used

• Emergency response resource needs • Written procedures to request resources,

mutual aid, contracts with private-sector companies, agreements with regional, state, or federal assets

• Capability of agency personnel

Page 32: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Light-Frame Buildings (1 of 2)

• Primarily wood frame, 1–4 stories high, residential

• Inherent lateral stability weakness at foundation, connections between building components, windows, doors:– May cause weak walls to rack over

Page 33: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Light-Frame Buildings (2 of 2)

© Sue Ashe/ShutterStock, Inc.

Page 34: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Assess Light-Frame Buildings For

• Cracked or leaning walls• Offset of building from foundation• Leaning first story• Cracked or leaning chimney, loose

masonry • Cracked or loose brick veneer• Separation between main building and

additions

Page 35: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Heavy Wall Buildings (1 of 3)

• Characterized by URM or tilt-up concrete walls, steel or concrete frames with masonry infill walls, other low-rise designs incorporating concrete and/or masonry walls

• Used for residential, commercial, industrial purposes, 1–6 stories

• Lack of lateral wall strength and weakness of connections between walls, floors, roofs primary weakness

Page 36: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Heavy Wall Buildings (2 of 3)

• Collapse problems related to load-bearing walls of brick, hollow concrete block, or stone

• Falling hazards from bricks, rubble, and ornamentation are common during collapse event.

Page 37: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Heavy Wall Buildings (3 of 3)

© wheatley/ShutterStock, Inc.

Page 38: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Assess Heavy Wall Buildings For

• Cracked walls at building corners and near wall openings

• Unsupported and partially collapsed floors or roofs

• Damaged connections between walls or columns and floors or roof structures

Page 39: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Heavy Floor Buildings (1 of 2)

• Concrete frame, 1–13 stories

• Some built with URM infill walls

• Weakest designs may lead soft first-story collapse and include:– High, open ground-level floors – High open areas on corners of multistory

Page 40: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Heavy Floor Buildings (2 of 2)

Courtesy of Robert Rhea

Page 41: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Assess Heavy Floor Buildings For• Exposed reinforcing steel or lack of

concrete on column• Concrete cracking in columns at floor line

both above/below floor• Diagonal shear cracking in beams where

supported by columns or walls• Cracking in flat concrete slabs • Loose infill masonry walls, cracks in

concrete shear walls and/or stairs

Page 42: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Pre-cast Buildings (1 of 2)

• Concrete

• One or more stories

• Factory pre-made individual building components

• Primary weakness occurs at interconnection of various components

Page 43: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Pre-cast Buildings (2 of 2)

Courtesy of Robert Rhea

Page 44: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Assess Pre-cast Buildings For

• Stability by observing connections for broken welds, cracked corbels, or broken connector bolts

• Cracking of concrete in columns

• Adequate support of wall panel connections

• Badly cracked walls

Page 45: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Lean-to Void Spaces (1 of 2)

• Victims are most likely located under floor within void space or on top of collapsed floor at lower end where debris slides down to bottom.

Page 46: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Lean-to Void Spaces (2 of 2)

Page 47: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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V-Shape Collapse Voids (1 of 2)

• Victims can be found: – Under each side of created V-shape near

exterior walls– On top of collapsed floor in middle of created

V-shape, along with all other floor contents, will shift to lowest position when floor fails

Page 48: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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V-Shape Collapse Voids (2 of 2)

Page 49: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Pancake Collapse Voids (1 of 2)

• Do not result in many survivable spaces except sometimes in void where floor assembly falls and rests on furniture or appliances

Page 50: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Pancake Collapse Voids (2 of 2)

Page 51: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Cantilever Voids (1 of 2)

• Victims are often found under unsupported cantilever in very dangerous locations.

Page 52: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Cantilever Voids (2 of 2)

Page 53: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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A-Frame Voids (1 of 2)

• Victims are typically found under void spaces created on either side of middle support area or outside void spaces near side walls where floors failed at connection.

Page 54: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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A-Frame Voids (2 of 2)

Page 55: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Approach Hazards (1 of 2)

• Include numerous natural or human-made factors that can limit responders’ ability to reach the incident location quickly and hamper rescue:– Natural disasters (earthquakes, tornadoes) – Terrorist bombings – Damaged local infrastructure (roadways,

bridges, electrical wires)

Page 56: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Approach Hazards (2 of 2)

Courtesy of Lara Shane/FEMA

Page 57: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Reconnaissance of Collapse Scene

• Perform from safe location, away from potential secondary collapse hazards

• Assesses area for hazards and determines needed hazard mitigation actions

• Identifies access problems

• Requires calm, slow, methodical manner

Page 58: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Utility Hazards and Other Hazardous Materials (1 of 2)

• Damaged building utilities may cause fires, hazardous environments, and explosions.

• Commercial and residential buildings may have hazardous materials onsite.

• Nuclear or biological weapons, chemical agents, WMD as an incident cause should be considered.

Page 59: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Utility Hazards and Other Hazardous Materials (2 of 2)

© Steve Allen/Brand X Pictures/Alamy Images

Page 60: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Secondary Collapse Indicators (1 of 3)

• Leaning walls• Smoke or water seeping through breaks or

joints in wall• Creaking, groaning, snapping, falling

debris sounds• Sagging floors or roof • Missing, strained, or damaged building

components or connections

Page 61: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

6

Secondary Collapse Indicators (2 of 3)

• Excessive loading of structural elements due to debris shift

• Racked (leaning) or twisted structure

• Significant vibration sources in the area

• Aftershock conditions or potential

• Active fire in building

Page 62: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Secondary Collapse Indicators (3 of 3)

© A.S. Zain/ShutterStock, Inc.

Page 63: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Surface Hazards

• Result from presence of:– Unstable debris pile– Loose and uneven rubble– Sharp materials

• May cause personnel to slip, fall, suffer twists, strains, sprains, and other injuries

Page 64: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Void Space Hazards

• Entering collapse void to perform search and rescue operations is inherently dangerous.– May cause secondary collapse– Requires stability assessment first

• Awareness-level rescuers must be trained to at least awareness level for confined-space rescue.

Page 65: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Basic Hazard Mitigation

• Recognize surface and avoid hazards and possible injuries.

• Recognize and avoid collapse hazards.

• Limit exposure to hazardous areas by denying entry and establishing collapse safety zones.

Page 66: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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WMD Event (1 of 2)

• Involves responses by multiple agencies

• Anticipate multiple events or secondary devices.

• Maintain situational awareness.

• May become a mass casualty incident

Page 67: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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WMD Event (2 of 2)

Courtesy of FEMA

Page 68: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Basic Search Methods

• Physical search:– Similar to physical search in fire-ground

situation

• Hailing system:– System for locating victims

• Structural collapse marking systems:– Different systems used to identify buildings,

locations, hazard assessments, victims

Page 69: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Building and Structure Marking System

Reprinted with permission from NFPA 1670, Operations and Training for Technical Search and Rescue Incidents, Copyright © 2009, National Fire Protection Association, Quincy, MA 02169. This reprinted material is not the complete and official position of the NFPA on the referenced subject, which is represented only by the standard in its entirety.

Page 70: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Victim Location Marking System

Reprinted with permission from NFPA 1670, Operations and Training for Technical Search and Rescue Incidents, Copyright © 2009, National Fire Protection Association, Quincy, MA 02169. This reprinted material is not the complete and official position of the NFPA on the referenced subject, which is represented only by the standard in its entirety.

Page 71: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Patient Care Considerations

• Walking wounded may be suffering from typical collapse injuries.

• Adequate EMS resources are necessary.

• Surface victims should be recovered as quickly as conditions permit.

• Extrication of entrapped victims may require special hand tools.

Page 72: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Summary (1 of 2)

• Types of buildings involved in structural collapse vary.

• Resource requirements include search, rescue, EMS, heavy equipment, structural engineers, utility companies, and other resources.

• Effective planning is critical to structural collapse emergency management.

• IMS implementation is the key to controlling the emergency.

Page 73: 6 Structural Collapse Search and Rescue. 6 Objectives (1 of 3) Identify the need for structural collapse search and rescue operations. Describe the various.

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Summary (2 of 2)

• Collapse characteristics differ based on the building type.

• Types of collapse voids and potential victim locations are based on building’s construction.

• Thorough hazard assessment and ongoing assessment is necessary.

• Initial search measures by first responders include physical search and implementation of hailing system.