The Hindu (Madurai)

Health department to come up with Disaster Preparedne­ss Plan for T.N.

The directorat­e has documented its public health response strategies following extensive ooding in the aftermath of Cyclone Michaung in Chennai and its suburbs as a result of which there was no major outbreak of diseases

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On the basis of lessons learnt from the ood in 2023, the Directorat­e of Public Health (DPH) and Preventive Medicine are looking to draw up a Disaster Preparedne­ss Plan for Tamil Nadu, and also district-level plans in the longer run.

The directorat­e has documented its public health response strategies following extensive ooding in the aftermath of Cyclone Michaung in Chennai, its suburbs and southern districts during December 2023, as a result of which there were no major outbreak of diseases.

A team from the DPH, Institute of Community Medicine, Madras Medical College and SRM Medical College, Kattankula­thur, has documented the lessons learnt from Tamil Nadu’s ood response in 2023 and public health interventi­ons that were put in place to address potential outbreaks in the article Adapting to Adversity: Public Health Flood Response Strategies Following Twin Disasters, published in the Tamil Nadu Journal of Public Health and Medical Research.

On December 3 and 4, Cyclone Michaung triggered extensive ooding in Chennai and its suburbs, while Tenkasi, Tirunelvel­i, Thoothukud­i and Kanniyakum­ari witnessed unpreceden­ted deluge following the heavy downpour on

December 17 and 18.

Floods have signi™cant implicatio­ns on public health.

The displaced population faced the risk of waterborne and foodborne disease outbreaks such as acute diarrhoeal diseases and dysentery due to interrupti­ons in safe water supply and sanitation, while overcrowdi­ng increased the transmissi­on of airborne diseases such as measles and pneumonia. Increased vector breeding raised the risk of vectorborn­e diseases, the authors said.

Continuous monitoring

“We did anticipate outbreaks following the oods. But, establishi­ng an emergency control centre early worked to our advantage. We continuous­ly monitored the source of drinking water, thereby preventing diarrhoeal diseases, and managed to bring vector-borne diseases under control,” said T.S. Selvavinay­agam, Director of Public Health.

The 474 mobile medical units comprising a doctor, nurse, adequate medication­s and requiremen­ts to perform small interventi­ons, were the biggest advantage for the public health sector, he said, adding: “They can be deployed in any place where there are no resources for immediate response.”

No major outbreaks

The e˜ectiveness of the various ood response measures that included establishm­ent of a command system at the State and district levels, utilisatio­n of technology for informed decision-making, continuous disease surveillan­ce, formation of task-speci™c teams such as for ood response, vector control, water analysis and continuous monitoring of activities were proved by the absence of major outbreaks in both Chennai and the southern districts, the authors noted.

But it does not stop here. The lessons learnt are being put to use for better planning.

Decentrali­se plan

“We are looking to have a Disaster Preparedne­ss Plan. Most of the time, our response has been to mobilise our mobile medical teams to the a˜ected areas. This is a part of the common response, and we want to decentrali­se the plan,” Dr. Selvavinay­agam said.

Anticipati­ng the severity of an event is di£cult, he said, adding: “Within the season, the Indian Meteorolog­ical Department gives an idea of what to anticipate at least a week ahead. Our strategy is to have local coverage. For instance, if there is a problem in Tirunelvel­i, we can move our team from Namakkal to there or if there is a problem in Villupuram, we can move our team from Tiruvallur.”

“During the oods, we understood that local resources are the most valuable,” he said.

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