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Iranian Journal of Epidemiology. 2005; 1 (1): 33-45
in Persian | IMEMR | ID: emr-172934

ABSTRACT

On 26 December 2003, an earthquake measuring 6.5 on the Richter scale struck the city of Bam and the surrounding villages. This study was conducted to determine the needs of the affected population on the 19[th] and 20[th] days after the quake to help with the prioritization of relief activities and efficient resource allocation. Following a feasibility study on 10 Jan 2004, a team consisting of volunteer students of School of Public Health at KUMS was assembled and trained. Each of the 8 groups consisted of 3-4 students with at least 1 man responsible for security on the field. On the 13th and 14[th] of January, using a cross-sectional design, 60 clusters including 420 households, 7 households in each cluster, were studied based on a Cluster Geographic-Based Sampling [GBS] Plan. Fifty-five households [13.1%] had children < 2 years, 81 [19.3%] had children aged 2-5 years and 68 [16.2%] contained people more than 65 years old. Thirty-seven households [8.9%, CI 95%: 6.4-11.7%] had changed their residence in Bam from one zone to another; the main reason for this was poor environmental health conditions [85%]. The main source of health and social messages for families was word of mouth 284 [67.6%]. The most commonly needed items were bathrooms [73.8%, CI 95%: 68.9-78.7%], food [68.8%, CI 95%: 62.6-75.0%] and warm clothes [67.4%, CI 95%: 60.9-73.8%]. The most frequent illness was acute respiratory infection [59.8%, CI 95%: 54.3-65.2%]. Two hundred households [47.6%, CI 95%: 42.6-52.6%] complained of difficulties in obtaining health and medical services. The main barrier to access was transportation problems due to long distance [38.1%, CI 95%: 35.6-40.6%]. We conclude that relief operations should be continued to provide basic public health facilities. Active delivery of health and medical services should be strengthened, and problems related to reproductive health should not be ignored. The GBS plan is a useful tool in the post-disaster surveys. Using volunteer university students was a rewarding experience and teaching and application of [Disaster Epidemiology] should be improved in this country

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