Abstract

Chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) hazards may be encountered during any major incident. General considerations include modifications to triage, managing contaminated or contagious casualties, and the identification and appropriate management of intoxicated/infected/irradiated/injured casualties. In dealing with chemical incidents, characteristics such as toxicity, latency and persistency need to be understood in order to manage casualties appropriately in terms of triage category, life-saving interventions and assessment of contamination risk to responders. Biological agents can be differentiated into live agents (bacteria, viruses and fungi) and toxins. Live agent characteristics and management depend on pathogenicity, virulence, lethality, infectivity and transmissibility, whereas toxins are treated similarly to chemical agents. Radiological and nuclear hazards are managed similarly and may cause irradiation, contamination (external and internal) or a combination with or without trauma. A generic and structured approach is advised to deal with all major incidents including those with a suspected of confirmed CBRN hazard. All healthcare professionals that may be involved in the response to such an incident need to be familiar with the principles of CBRN incident management and of CBRN casualty management as described in this article.

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