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EAHA DM 3.5c: Floods and Landslides - Captions

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    (English captions by Trisha Paul, University of Michigan.)
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    Floods and Landslides.
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    Flash floods are usually of rapid onset either
    from rain or structural failure.
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    Brief duration, associated with steep terrains,
    or canyons, or valleys.
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    There is little or no warning, and mortality
    may be high.
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    River floods are usually slow onset but of
    long duration, associated with low lying, concave
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    terrains, especially with people settling
    in these areas, they usually provide some
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    warning.
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    Floods account for 40% of all world disasters,
    and cause the most damage worldwide.
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    These are the most lethal floods that have
    occurred in modern history.
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    In Uganda, as in other countries in Eastern
    Africa, floods are an emerging public health
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    problem.
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    Every year, floods affect more and more people
    in different localities.
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    They are closely associated with heavy rains,
    that is natural causes, and human settlement
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    patterns, technological causes.
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    An example of Uganda, floods occurred in Bududa, 2010,
    Butalejja, 2010, Kisoro, 2010, Soroti, 2007,
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    Kumi, 2007, and they occur in
    Kampala every year.
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    Landslides can be predicted and risk reduction
    and mitigation activities can be initiated.
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    Factors that contribute to floods include
    topographical makeup of the area, and then they
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    may accompany other disasters like heavy rains
    and river surges, breakdown of river embankments,
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    hurricane sea surges, earthquake-related tsunamis,
    landslides or volcanic eruptions.
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    Natural factors include geological factors,
    seasonal variations, climatic factors, and
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    topographical factors.
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    Human factors include urbanization, deforestation,
    over-grazing, improper construction, and inadequate
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    safeguards.
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    Most deaths occur in flash floods, and most
    deaths are due to drowning.
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    Death rates vary according to country, rate
    of onset and community resilience.
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    Public health impact of floods includes medical
    and public health needs that persist for many
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    months after the river floods, normal health
    care delivery may be disrupted, chronic illness
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    may be worsened in the long run.
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    However, serious infectious diseases are usually
    rare in flood and landslide situations.
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    Water and food shortages often develop.
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    Key health issues and safety response issues
    after floods include water quality, food safety,
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    cleanup activity and safety, sanitation and hygiene,
    disease vectors, chemical hazards, mental
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    health for responders and victims, temporary
    settlement, and early warning for subsequent
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    floods.
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    Outreach support after floods.
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    Not all victims can seek help.
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    They could be closed off due to geographical
    limits, monetary limits, or disability.
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    Prevent convergence on limited resources,
    set up search and rescue efforts, set up immediate
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    relief efforts, enhance surveillance
    and situational awareness.
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    Prevention and control measures for floods
    include mitigation, surveillance and early
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    warning, rapid needs assessment, mechanisms
    for search and rescue, mechanisms for immediate
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    control of water surges, public information,
    floodplain management, and responsible management
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    of human settlements.
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    Landslides.
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    In Uganda, as an example, landslides are a
    focal problem in areas that have topographic
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    risk.
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    Due to population pressures and land-use implications,
    people are moving higher and higher into high
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    risk areas.
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    Landslides can be predicted and risk reduction
    and mitigation activities can be initiated.
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    Secondary disaster can be caused by landslides
    and these include fires and explosions, building
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    collapse, dam failures and floods, and release
    of toxic materials.
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    Contributing natural factors include geophysical
    factors, topographic factors, and meteorological
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    factors.
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    Manmade factors include structural factors
    like types of houses, land-use patterns, demography,
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    and population pressures.
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    Health impacts of landslides may include minor
    injuries and lacerations, crush injuries to head
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    and chest, hemorrhage, bleeding, and hypovolemia,
    asphyxia, and drowning, and burns.
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    Delayed impacts include dehydration, environmental
    exposure, the crush syndrome in people who
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    are severely crushed, wound infection and sepsis,
    and smoke and dust inhalation.
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    Landslides do not often create significant
    outbreaks of new infectious diseases because
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    of the wash-out affect.
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    Prevention and control measures for landslides
    include avoiding construction in areas of
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    high geological risk, safer construction,
    drills, scenarios and planning in areas that
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    are landslide prone, planning for displaced
    populations, planning for emergency services,
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    and planning for search & rescue.
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    Saving lives.
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    Landslides have potential to cause
    Mass Casualty Incidents (MCIs).
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    There is need for rapid assessment of impact,
    timely and appropriate disaster response, surveillance
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    for injuries and diseases, dissemination of
    public health information, environmental health
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    and control measures, and follow up epidemiology.
Title:
EAHA DM 3.5c: Floods and Landslides - Captions
Description:

This is a remix of 3.5c: Floods and Landslides narrated by Roy William Mayega (Makerere University). The original video (without captions) can be found at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zp6Xkqvqtb8. This video is part of a learning module from the East Africa HEALTH Alliance called Public Health Emergency Planning and Management for Districts. The full module and the video transcript can be accessed at http://openmi.ch/disaster-mgmt. Copyright 2009-2019 Roy Mayega (Makerere University). The video, transcript, and module are all shared under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 3.0 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
08:38

English subtitles

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