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Letters to the Editor

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2013

Kristine M. Gebbie*
Affiliation:
Elizabeth Standish Gill Professor of Nursing and Director, Center for Health Policy; Columbia University School of Nursing
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Abstract

Type
Letters to the Editor
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health, Inc. 2007

To the Editor:

With the first issue of Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, our collective ability to apply research findings to emergency preparedness and response has been increased. Thank you!

Although each of the health professions involved with responding to emergency events and disasters has had its own journal, there has not been a single publication that specifically reaches out to all of them. The title itself signals the breadth of interest: not only what to do when an emergent event occurs, but how we apply population-focused thinking in advance to minimize the impact. The effort involved in bringing not only multiple medical specialties together but also adding in nursing, public health, administration, and more general emergency preparedness perspectives is enormous. Each of these fields speaks a different dialect of preparedness, and members of each have a strong tendency to prefer speaking to one another in their own dialect. The editing challenges of bringing the best of science from each into a form useful to all are well worth the effort.

Over and over again, the stories told of emergency response repeat the complications brought about by the failures in communication and collaboration: individuals who go where they are not needed, act without coordination with others, fail to follow best practices, and complain later that their fine contributions were underappreciated. These tales of woe are not limited to my own profession of nursing or to any other of the professions and disciplines represented on the Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness editorial board or identified as its audience. Although the greatly expanded training programs of the last years have improved the situation, we are still not where we should be.

A journal that is serious about maintaining a high level of scholarship while speaking as an emergency preparedness and response generalist to all of the concerned disciplines and specialties is perhaps in danger of overreaching. The challenge facing this journal is the ability to maintain “practical” scholarly rigor given the limitations faced during the disaster while setting a standard that does not allow for “disaster tourism” articles (eg, “I went to a worse disaster than you did and here’s how I triumphed”). It will take ongoing attention to find and encourage the busy practitioners of emergency planning and disaster response to take time to document why and how they go about their work. It will require occasionally telling the prolific writers “thanks, but not another manuscript from you just now.” All of us will benefit if the journal’s editorial staff is able to take time not only to see the potential in a new author’s effort but also to find a way to develop the potential into a meaningful contribution.

The field needs a serious, professional journal that cuts across our professional divisions, habits, and history and regularly nudges us to learn from one another so that when emergencies occur, the full benefits of all clinical professions and public health are readily available and brought to bear. I see this happening through Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, and I am delighted.

Kristine M. Gebbie, DrPH, RN

Elizabeth Standish Gill Professor of Nursing and Director, Center for Health Policy; Columbia University School of Nursing