Disaster Nomenclature–A Functional Impact Approach: The PICE System
- 1 July 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Academic Emergency Medicine
- Vol. 3 (7) , 723-727
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1553-2712.1996.tb03498.x
Abstract
A standard nomenclature that concisely describes any disaster is currently lacking. This article describes a model taxonomy system. Instead of the term "disaster," a root word "PICE," "potential injury-creating event," is used. Descriptive modifiers to account for all possible scenarios surround this root word, as illustrated. [table: see text] A modifier is chosen from each column and a stage is assigned to each PICE. Column A describes the potential for additional casualties. Column B describes whether resources are overwhelmed and, if so, whether they must simply be augmented (disruptive) or they must first be reconstituted (paralytic). Column C describes the extent of geographic involvement. "Stage" refers strictly to the likelihood that outside medical assistance will be needed. Stage 0 means there is little chance, stage I means there is a small chance (place outside help on "alert"), stage II means there is a moderate chance (place on "standby"), and stage III means local medical resources are clearly overwhelmed (immediately dispatch outside resources, commit personnel, prepare remote hospitals). For example, a multiple vehicle crash in a large city would be a "static, controlled, local PICE, stage 0." In conclusion, a new nomenclature for describing disasters is reported. A short phrase describes the incident and communicates the need for outside assistance. The model may be useful for disaster planning, management, and research.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Medical Disaster Response to Reduce Immediate Mortality after an EarthquakeNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996
- Definition and classification of disasters: Introduction of a disaster severity scaleThe Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1990
- The medical severity index of disastersThe Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1989