【Explained by a Former Firefighter】First 72 Hours After a Disaster: What to Do

Uncategorized

The first 72 hours after a disaster determine survival, injury recovery, and long-term outcomes. Emergency services are overwhelmed, information is limited, and small mistakes compound quickly. As a former firefighter who operated during this critical window after earthquakes, floods, and storms, I explain what to do in the first 72 hours—and why discipline matters more than speed.


■① Why the First 72 Hours Are the Most Dangerous

This period is critical because:

  • Rescue resources are stretched thin
  • Infrastructure damage is still evolving
  • Aftershocks and secondary hazards continue
  • Stress impairs judgment

Most preventable injuries occur during this window.


■② The Most Dangerous Assumption: “Help Is On the Way”

People get hurt because they:

  • Take unnecessary risks
  • Leave safe locations too early
  • Wait passively for assistance

As a firefighter, I saw prepared people stabilize themselves until help arrived.


■③ Hour 0–6: Stabilize Yourself and Your Environment

Immediate priorities include:

  • Check for injuries and provide basic first aid
  • Identify and avoid hazards
  • Secure lighting and footwear
  • Account for family members

Stability prevents panic-driven injuries.


■④ Hour 6–24: Secure Water, Food, and Information

Focus on essentials:

  • Establish safe water use
  • Eat simple, familiar foods
  • Use radios for official updates
  • Conserve phone batteries

Reliable information reduces dangerous decisions.


■⑤ Hour 24–48: Prevent Secondary Disasters

New risks emerge:

  • Sanitation breakdown
  • Fatigue and dehydration
  • Fire and gas hazards
  • Emotional stress

Firefighters respond to secondary incidents more than primary ones.


■⑥ Managing Physical and Mental Fatigue

Fatigue causes mistakes:

  • Rotate rest among adults
  • Maintain regular hydration and meals
  • Limit unnecessary movement

Exhaustion undermines survival.


■⑦ Deciding Whether to Evacuate or Stay

Reassess conditions regularly:

  • Structural damage
  • Utility stability
  • Official guidance

As a responder, I saw better outcomes when decisions were deliberate, not rushed.


■⑧ Lessons From the First 72 Hours on Scene

From firefighter experience:

  • Calm routines reduced injuries
  • Simple rules worked best
  • Prepared households avoided rescues

Survival improves with structure.


■Summary|The First 72 Hours Are About Control

Survival during the first 72 hours depends on managing risk, not seeking comfort.

Conclusion:
As a former firefighter who worked during the first 72 hours after disasters, I can say clearly that survival is about discipline. People who stabilize their environment, manage fatigue, and avoid assumptions stay safe. In disasters, the first 72 hours reward calm control—not urgency.

Comments

Copied title and URL