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Report

Preparing for Terrorism: Tools for Evaluating the Metropolitan Medical Response System Program

Released:
January 9, 2003
Type:
Consensus Report
Topic(s):
Biomedical and Health Research, Public Health, Quality and Patient Safety
Activity:
Evaluation of the Metropolitan Medical Response System Program to Enhance Local Capability to Respond to Terrorism with Weapons of Mass Destruction
Board(s):
Board on Health Sciences Policy

The Metropolitan Medical Response System (MMRS) program of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) provides funds to major U.S. cities to help them develop plans for coping with the health and medical consequences of a terrorist attack with chemical, biological, or radiological (CBR) agents.

DHHS asked the Institute of Medicine to assist in assessing the effectiveness of the MMRS program by developing appropriate evaluation methods, tools, and processes to assess both its own management of the program and local preparedness in the cities that have participated in the program.

This report provides the managers of the MMRS program and others concerned about local capabilities to cope with CBR terrorism with three evaluation tools and a three-part assessment method. The tools provided are a questionnaire survey eliciting feedback about the management of the MMRS program, a table of preparedness indicators for 23 essential response capabilities, and a set of three scenarios and related questions for group discussion. The assessment method described integrates document inspection, a site visit by a team of expert peer reviewers, and observations at community exercises and drills.

Report at a Glance

Report Brief. Preparing for Terrorism: Tools for Evaluating the Metropolitan Medical Response System Program (PDF)

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