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Wildfires in Gatlinburg, Tennessee

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File Language:
English


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  • Description:
    By late November 2016, wildfires had been raging in the southeast for weeks. In Tennessee, fires in the southeast Appalachia region were causing extremely smoky conditions in nearby towns but were largely under control. On November 28, Jack Cochran, emergency response coordinator for Tennessee’s east region, went home at 5 p.m., aware of the nearby fires but not particularly concerned by them. Some shelters had opened in Gatlinburg for people who needed relief from the smoke, and he checked in on those before settling in for the night.

    By 8 p.m., all of that had changed. Hurricane-force winds had blown fire embers miles from the fire zone, igniting new fires that were now barreling toward Gatlinburg. Though there was almost no warning for this fire that would end up destroying 2,460 structures and claiming 14 lives, the state and local health departments were able to leverage past experience to adapt to the changing circumstances and instituted public health emergency management structures that were capable of leading and supporting this public health response.

    Because the devastation from the fire was so expansive, there were many public health pieces to this response, all of which were supported by the PHEP cooperative agreement. The local health department deployed 89 nurses who collectively worked 2,436 hours and a mobile medical unit to help with the surge of patients at the hospital in Gatlinburg. Several dispensing sites were established to administer influenza and tetanus vaccines, one which primarily served the 1,000 firefighters who were dispatched to the area to contain the blaze. State epidemiologists helped the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation account for every missing person, while environmental health specialists tested well water and ensured that local restaurants were able to reopen as soon as possible, lessening the impact on Gatlinburg’s tourism industry.

    Publication date from document properties.

    PHEP_Stories_tennessee.pdf

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  • Pages in Document:
    2 unnumbered pages
  • Citation:
    Public Health Emergency Preparedness Cooperative Agreement (PHEP) Program stories from the field
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    urn:sha-512:1745f4d075d7527b58d26f9edef23d9deb30f714d3b77301bf2d84bdbd3a8f7177f889ea406310f6e0ede9abc9cccd062d10725720033ca4bdd6258bde82ad20
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File Language:
English
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