Emergency Incident Management Systems :Fundamentals and Applications

Publication subTitle :Fundamentals and Applications

Author: Louis N. Molino   Sr.  

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc‎

Publication year: 2006

E-ISBN: 9780470043417

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780471455646

Subject: X9 Safety Science

Language: ENG

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Description

A "street smart" look atincident management in all its permutations

Incident Management Systems (IMS) provide the means by which to coordinate the efforts of individual agencies in order to stabilize an incident and protect life, property, and the environment. Born from the FireScope project of the late 1960s, which was developed in response to the major wildfires that regularly plagued Southern California, these systems have evolved with many similarities and certain fundamental differences.

Emergency Incident Management Systems: Fundamentals and Applications contrasts the major forms of Incident Management/Incident Command Systems. The author illuminates these differences and offers a fresh perspective on the concepts on which these systems are founded in order to make them more accessible and user-friendly. Without suggesting major changes in the systems, he bridges the gap between their theoretical and academic foundations and their real-world applications, and makes them more applicable to the professional's daily needs.

Timely features of the book include:
* An "in the field" point of view
* Coverage of incidents of mass destruction
* Filled-out sample forms designed to aid professionals in completing reports

In post-9/11 America, where incident management has become a national priority-one that must be easilyunderstood and applicable across all emergency systems-this book provides a useful tool for helping today's emergency workers be more informed and more prepared than ever.

Chapter

Acknowledgments

pp.:  1 – 9

About the Author

pp.:  9 – 11

Preface

pp.:  11 – 21

3 THE EVOLUTION OF THE MODERN APPLICATION OF INCIDENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM

pp.:  37 – 47

4 COMMON COMPONENTS OF THE INCIDENT MANAGEMENT SYSTE

pp.:  47 – 53

5 MAJOR COMMAND FUNCTIONS OF THE INCIDENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM

pp.:  53 – 75

6 THE PLANNING PROCESS IN INCIDENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS

pp.:  75 – 119

7 THE LOGISTICS PROCES

pp.:  119 – 169

8 CUSTOMIZING INCIDENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS FOR SPECIFIC APPLICATION

pp.:  169 – 185

9 ADVANCED INCIDENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM CONCEPTS

pp.:  185 – 239

APPENDICES

pp.:  239 – 255

Glossary

pp.:  255 – 517

Index

pp.:  517 – 537

LastPages

pp.:  537 – 540

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