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Children in Disasters

 

Children are a uniquely vulnerable population in disasters and often overlooked in preparedness and disaster drills and exercises.

Children are NOT just small adults. Let’s take a look at some things that make them unique.

 

 

Anatomic/Physiologic Feature

Implications

Increased Minute Ventilation

Shorter Height

More susceptibility to inhaled agents (especially higher density agents that may be heavier and stay closer to the ground)
Higher Body Surface Area

Increased exposure to any agents that come in contact with skin

Higher risk of hypothermia

Less Blood Volume Less physiologic reserve in cases of dehydration and blood loss

Increased Compliance of Chest Wall

Less developed Abdominal Musculature

Higher risk of intrathoracic and abdominal injuries from blunt trauma
Proportionally Larger Heads Head injury more common
Developmental/Psychosocial

This feature is pertinent to all aspects of disaster:

  • Inability to flee danger
  • Children may be hesitant or unwilling to obey commands of a stranger
  • Some children may not be able to walk due to age or developmental capacity (making ambulatory assessment in disaster triage a limitation)
  • May be fearful of people dressed in personal protective equipment